Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
House of Commons Foreign Affairs Committee Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism Fourth Report of Session 2005–06 Report, together with formal minutes, oral and written evidence Ordered by The House of Commons to be printed 21 June 2006 HC 573 Incorporating HC 904–i Published on 2 July 2006 by authority of the House of Commons London: The Stationery Office Limited £0.00 Foreign Affairs Committee The Foreign Affairs Committee is appointed by the House of Commons to examine the administration, expenditure and policy of the Foreign and Commonwealth Office and its associated agencies. Current membership Mike Gapes (Labour, Ilford South), Chairman Mr Fabian Hamilton (Labour, Leeds North East) Rt Hon Mr David Heathcoat-Amory (Conservative, Wells) Mr John Horam (Conservative, Orpington) Mr Eric Illsley (Labour, Barnsley Central) Mr Paul Keetch (Liberal Democrat, Hereford) Andrew Mackinlay (Labour, Thurrock) Mr John Maples (Conservative, Stratford-on-Avon) Sandra Osborne (Labour, Ayr, Carrick and Cumnock) Mr Greg Pope (Labour, Hyndburn) Mr Ken Purchase (Labour, Wolverhampton North East) Rt Hon Sir John Stanley (Conservative, Tonbridge and Malling) Ms Gisela Stuart (Labour, Birmingham Edgbaston) Richard Younger-Ross (Liberal Democrat, Teignbridge) The following member was also a member of the committee during the parliament. Rt Hon Mr Andrew Mackay (Conservative, Bracknell) Powers The committee is one of the departmental select committees, the powers of which are set out in House of Commons Standing Orders, principally in SO No 152. These are available on the Internet via www.parliament.uk. Publication The Reports and evidence of the Committee are published by The Stationery Office by Order of the House. All publications of the Committee (including press notices) are on the Internet at http://www.parliament.uk/parliamentary_committees/foreign_affairs_committee.cfm. Committee staff The current staff of the Committee are Steve Priestley (Clerk), Sarah Ioannou (Second Clerk), Ann Snow (Committee Specialist), Kit Dawnay, (Committee Specialist), Kevin Candy (Committee Assistant), Catherine Jackson (Secretary) and Chintan Makwana (Senior Office Clerk). Contacts All correspondence should be addressed to the Clerk of the Foreign Affairs Committee, House of Commons, London SW1A 0AA. The telephone number for general enquiries is 020 7219 6394; the Committee’s email address is [email protected] Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 1 Contents Report Conclusions and recommendations Page 3 1 Introduction 15 2 The ongoing threat from terrorism 17 Continuing International Threat Developments in al Qaeda Public diplomacy and human rights Guantánamo Bay Extraordinary rendition The International Rules-Based System 3 Saudi Arabia Saudi Arabia and the ‘War against Terrorism’ Background The terrorist threat in Saudi Arabia Counter-terrorism policy Saudi Arabia and reform Background Tentative reform measures Human rights Bilateral relations 4 The United Arab Emirates The United Arab Emirates and the ‘war against terrorism’ Background Counter-Terrorism Policy The UAE and Reform Democratisation Human rights 5 Israel–Palestine Developments in 2005–06 Political developments in the Palestinian Territories Aid to the Palestinians The Jericho incident Political developments in Israel Continued violence The withdrawal from Gaza International engagement The future of the Road Map 17 20 21 25 31 35 39 39 39 39 42 48 48 50 56 58 60 60 60 62 67 67 68 71 71 71 73 75 76 76 77 82 83 2 6 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism Iraq 85 Security situation Further deterioration Iraqi Security Forces Multi-National Force Political developments Further political milestones Iranian influence Reconstruction and economic development Diplomatic representation Relations in Basra The decision to go to war in Iraq 7 Iran 108 Background Nuclear standoff Iran’s nuclear programme Diplomatic process Options for the international community Iran and the ‘War against Terrorism’ Links with terrorism Position towards Israel Involvement in neighbouring states Iran and Reform 8 Afghanistan Background The Security Situation Counter-Narcotics Strategy Role of the United Kingdom 9 85 85 88 90 96 96 99 99 103 104 106 Non-proliferation The Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) India The Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT) Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention Chemical Weapons Convention The G8 Global Partnership The Missile Technology Control Regime The Wassenaar Arrangement The Arms Trade Treaty 108 109 109 111 114 124 124 125 125 127 131 131 132 133 138 141 141 143 145 146 147 148 149 151 152 153 Formal minutes 155 List of witnesses 165 List of written evidence 166 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 3 Conclusions and recommendations The ongoing threat from terrorism 1. We conclude that despite a number of successes targeting the leadership and infrastructure of al Qaeda, the danger of international terrorism, whether from al Qaeda or other related groups, has not diminished and may well have increased. Al Qaeda continues to pose an extremely serious and brutal threat to the United Kingdom and its interests. (Paragraph 15) 2. We conclude that the dispersal and fragmentation of al Qaeda into more autonomous local cells mainly linked together by a common ideology will make it more difficult to tackle the threat of international terrorism. We further conclude that the situation in Iraq has provided both a powerful source of propaganda for Islamist extremists and also a crucial training ground for international terrorists associated with al Qaeda. (Paragraph 21) 3. We conclude that propaganda is one of the major tools in al Qaeda’s arsenal. We further conclude that progress towards resolving key international conflicts would go some way to removing widespread feelings of injustice in the Muslim world that feed into the causes of and support for terrorism. Although the United Kingdom and its allies recognise this, and are working to resolve these conflicts, they are putting insufficient effort and funding into countering terrorist propaganda. Much greater effort needs to be made to communicate effectively with the Arab and Islamic world in order to bridge the gulf of mistrust that feeds into international terrorism. We recommend that the Government continue to engage with Muslim leaders and clerics who speak out against distorted and extremist versions of their faith. We commend the Government’s Engaging with the Islamic World Programme as well as the decision to set up an Arabic BBC World Service television station, but note that it will initially broadcast for only 12 hours a day and be much less generously funded than al Jazeera, which is heavily subsidised by the government of Qatar. We conclude that much more could be done. We recommend that the Government set out in its response to this Report what plans it has to expand its work in this field. We also recommend that the BBC World Service carry out an evaluation of the costeffectiveness of this expenditure. (Paragraph 30) 4. We acknowledge that there is a problem of what to do with some of the detainees at Guantánamo and that those detained include some very dangerous terrorists. We also conclude that the continuing existence of Guantánamo diminishes US moral authority and adds to the list of grievances against the US. We further conclude that detentions without either national or international authority work against British as well as US interests and hinder the effective pursuit of the ‘war against terrorism’. We conclude that those who can be reasonably safely released should be released, those who can be prosecuted as criminals should be prosecuted and that as many others as possible should be returned to their countries of citizenship. We commend the British Government for its policy of urging the US government to move towards closing Guantánamo. (Paragraph 46) 4 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 5. We conclude that there has been a lot of speculation about the possible use of rendition to countries where torture can take place, so called “Black Sites” and the complicity of the British Government, all of which would be very serious matters, but that there has been no hard evidence of the truth of any of these allegations. The British and US governments have categorically denied that either UK airspace, or airports have been used by the US government for rendition or extraordinary rendition since 11 September 2001. We reiterate our strong view that the Government must deal with extraordinary rendition in a transparent manner with timely answers to questions from this Committee. We conclude that it is regrettable that far more detailed information has been given in parliamentary answers to opposition party spokesmen than has been given in response to questions from this Committee. (Paragraph 58) 6. We conclude that despite the reforms adopted by the 2005 UN General Summit, there remain uncertainties over the international legal framework for humanitarian intervention. We recommend that the Government set out in its response to this Report what steps it is taking to establish a consensus on whether and when intervention on humanitarian grounds is permissible. (Paragraph 66) Saudi Arabia 7. We conclude that there remains a serious terrorist threat in Saudi Arabia, and that this is directed at both the Saudi authorities and foreign interests. (Paragraph 77) 8. We conclude that Saudi Arabia is taking the threat of terrorism very seriously and is providing valuable assistance to the international community in this area. The Kingdom has put in place an effective security-focussed strategy targeting individuals and this has had a forceful impact on the al Qaeda presence in the Kingdom. However, we also conclude that the level of regional cooperation could be significantly improved, and recommend that the Government give assistance in this area, setting out in its response to this Report what steps it is taking. We further recommend that the Government pursue with its Saudi counterparts the possibility of a regional terrorism centre headed by Saudi Arabia. (Paragraph 87) 9. We conclude that Saudi Arabia is taking very seriously the causes of terrorism and process of extremist recruitment and has conducted valuable research in this area. We further conclude that Saudi Arabia is pursuing crucial long-term policies to tackle the causes of terrorism. We conclude that the United Kingdom could usefully learn from Saudi Arabia’s experience in this field, highlighting the two-way nature of cooperation with the Kingdom. (Paragraph 99) 10. We conclude that despite a number of reform steps, the political environment remains severely constrained in Saudi Arabia. This raises serious concerns, and in the context of glaring socio-economic disparities, could feed into extremism and the causes of terrorism. Nevertheless, we conclude that the Saudi reform process must be domestically driven; perceived interference by the international community could be counter productive. (Paragraph 128) 11. We conclude that the human rights situation in Saudi Arabia continues to give cause for grave concern. We recommend that the Government continue to make clear that Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 5 discrimination against women, other human rights abuses which are endemic in Saudi Arabia including discrimination against migrant workers, torture and the shortcomings of the judicial system, breed discontent and fall far short of universal standards. We recommend that the Government set out in its response to this Report what progress was made in this area at the April 2006 meeting of the Two Kingdoms Forum. We further recommend that the Government set out whether it is seeking a memorandum of understanding with Saudi Arabia. (Paragraph 135) 12. We conclude that the United Kingdom’s relationship with Saudi Arabia is of critical and strategic importance. Not only is the Kingdom a crucial ally in the international ‘war against terrorism’, but it is central to many of this country’s national interests and meets most of the Government’s strategic priorities. We further conclude that while the United Kingdom may not see eye to eye with Saudi Arabia on a number of issues, it is critically important that the two countries remain close and communicative allies. We conclude that Saudi Arabia is a country where a significant British diplomatic presence can make a difference. The stability of Saudi Arabia is vital to the United Kingdom’s interests, particularly in the context of the war in Iraq and developments in Iran. We conclude that stability requires significant reform. (Paragraph 139) 13. At the time of concluding the drafting of our Report, the United Kingdom’s courts had just determined that the Saudi Arabian government is immune, in international law, from being pursued in UK courts in relation to the unjustified detention and alleged torture of British citizens. We recommend that the British Government disclose what it knows about this grave incident and what representations it made on behalf of the British nationals. (Paragraph 140) The United Arab Emirates 14. We conclude that the UAE is an important ally in the international ‘war against terrorism’. We further conclude that the UAE has taken important steps to improve banking regulation in order to target money laundering; we welcome the role of British personnel in this area. However, we conclude that there are limits to what regulation of the banking sector can achieve with regard to terrorist financing. We further conclude that important work is being done to tackle the risk of proliferation, in large part through work between the UAE and the USA by means of the Container Security Initiative (CSI). We recommend that the Government set out in its response to this Report its current position on placing British officials in major ports overseas to improve security for the United Kingdom and its Overseas Territories. (Paragraph 167) 15. We conclude that the public and Congressional concern in the USA at the prospect of a deal that would have given Dubai Ports World control over a number of US ports is very regrettable, and sends the wrong signals to the Arab and Muslim world. However, we also conclude that the level of regional cooperation is not as high as it could be. We recommend that the Government work to support regional efforts at cooperation where appropriate and that it set out in its response to this Report what steps it is taking in this regard. We conclude that as a Muslim country, the UAE has an important role to play in countering sources of terrorism, such as religious 6 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism teaching and education system; indeed, the Federation’s leaders have provided bold and courageous leadership in this regard. We further conclude that the UAE’s experience in this area could provide useful lessons for the United Kingdom. (Paragraph 168) 16. We conclude that there is a serious democratic deficit in the UAE, although informal channels of consultation appear to go some way to address the needs of the population. We recommend that the Government work to support moves towards democratisation in the UAE, offering assistance wherever appropriate. (Paragraph 173) 17. We conclude that there remain areas of human rights concern in the UAE, notably the treatment of foreign workers. We recommend that the Government work to encourage the UAE to sign up to the remaining ILO rules and improve the status of foreign workers. We further conclude that there have been serious efforts to improve the situation of child jockeys, nevertheless, we recommend that the Government remain seized of this issue and remind the UAE of the need to protect children. (Paragraph 182) Israel–Palestine 18. We conclude that the recognition given to the state of Israel in President Abbas’s proposed 18-point peace plan is welcome but that the recognition should be explicit rather than implicit. We recommend that the FCO state whether or not it favours the holding of a national referendum in the Palestinian territories on President Abbas’s 18-point peace plan. (Paragraph 187) 19. We conclude that the Government is correct to refuse to deal directly with Hamas. We recommend that, until Hamas accepts the existence of Israel and commits itself to both to a two-state solution and exclusively peaceful means of achieving its goals, the Government should continue to refuse to deal with it directly. However, we further recommend that the Government continue to work with President Abbas, work with international organisations and non-governmental organisations in order to assist the Palestinian people, and seek out, where feasible, ‘back channels’ in order to facilitate movement towards negotiations between the Palestinians and Israelis. (Paragraph 192) 20. We conclude that the Government was right to refuse to channel its aid through a Palestinian administration led by Hamas, and we endorse the Government’s support for the policy set out by the Quartet in the London statement of 30 January. However, it is important that the Palestinian people are not punished for exercising their rights as voters and we support the subsequent decision to create a mechanism for channelling aid directly to those who most need it. We recommend that the Government act with all speed to ensure that this mechanism is fully implemented and that it has the desired effect of averting an economic and humanitarian disaster in the Palestinian territories. We further recommend that the Government, in its response to this Report, set out what steps it is taken to avert an economic and humanitarian crisis in the Palestinian Territories. (Paragraph 197) Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 7 21. We reiterate the Committee’s previous conclusions on the illegality of the current route of the separation barrier and underline our concerns about the impact it is having on the lives of ordinary Palestinians. We recommend that the Government continue to make the strongest representations to the Israeli authorities to align the route of the barrier with the 1967 border and that it raise the question of the present alignment of the barrier in international fora such as the new United Nations Council on Human Rights. (Paragraph 206) 22. We conclude that satisfactory road and rail links between Gaza and the West Bank are essential for the creation of a viable Palestinian state. We recommend that the Government intensify the international efforts being made to achieve progress with these projects and provide the Committee with a full statement of the latest position in its response to this Report. (Paragraph 213) 23. We conclude that there is little prospect of the Israelis and Palestinians reaching any agreement on the way forward without substantial commitment and engagement by the Quartet, by regional players and above all by the USA. We recommend that the Government do everything possible both bilaterally and through international mechanisms to encourage both parties to implement their Road Map obligations. (Paragraph 222) Iraq 24. We conclude that the continued deterioration in the security situation in Iraq is extremely worrying, as are the deepening sectarian and ethnic dimensions of the violence. We further conclude that Iraq’s neighbours have yet to take sufficient steps to prevent the movement of insurgents across Iraq’s borders, although we note that the length and porous nature of these borders make this task extremely difficult. (Paragraph 232) 25. We conclude that despite continued hard work to build up the Iraqi Security Forces, and the dedication and bravery of many of the members of those forces, they remain a long way from being able to take the lead on security across Iraq. We further conclude that relying on Shia and Kurdish communities to build up the Iraqi Security Forces has contributed to the development of sectarian forces and that this is regrettable in the volatile security and political environment in Iraq. We recommend that the Government continue to work with its international partners to address this problem and make clear to the Iraqi authorities the importance of legitimate national Security Forces. We further recommend that the Government set out in its response to this Report what steps it is taking to assist the Iraqi authorities to establish a security infrastructure that respects human rights. (Paragraph 238) 26. We recommend that the Government set out in its response to this Report the circumstances under which it would withdraw British forces from Iraq. We further recommend that the Government set out in its response to this Report the findings of the ‘joint committee to transfer security responsibility’. (Paragraph 245) 27. We conclude that, in the context of the insurgency and the appalling level of violence, detention will continue to be necessary; however, the level of such detentions is a problem for coalition forces too and for the United Kingdom’s image 8 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism in the region. Wherever and whenever possible such detainees should be handed over to the Iraqi government for trial. We recommend that the Government set out in its response to this Report the current number and status of detainees held by the United Kingdom in Iraq, including the basis for their detention, as well as any plans to transfer them to Iraqi or US custody or to subject them to due judicial process. We also recommend that the Government provide in its response the latest information it has as to the number of detainees being held by the USA in Iraq and the number being held by the Iraqi authorities. (Paragraph 247) 28. We conclude that the Government is making slow progress towards resolving the issue of how to regulate private military and security companies. This is regrettable given the increase in the use of such firms in Iraq and elsewhere. We recommend that the Government accelerate its efforts in this area and that it set out in its response to this Report what measures it plans to take. (Paragraph 253) 29. We commend the continued commitment of ordinary Iraqis to the democratic process in Iraq and are impressed by the obvious desire on the part of ordinary Iraqis to achieve a more representative political system. We reiterate the conclusion of our predecessor Committee that it is essential that the international community, and especially the USA and United Kingdom, refrain from interfering in Iraqi politics and decision making. Nevertheless, there is an important continuing role for the international community in support of the democratic government in Iraq. We recommend that the Government do all it can to facilitate the UN’s role in Iraq, both in terms of providing security assistance in Iraq and through support in the Security Council. We recommend that the Government set out in its response to this Report what progress has been made on providing security to the UN in Iraq and what plans there are to facilitate a greater UN presence. We further recommend that the Government set out in its response to this Report the progress made in establishing EU assistance to Iraq. (Paragraph 261) 30. We conclude that concerns over Iranian involvement in Iraq reinforce the need for dialogue and engagement with Tehran. We recommend that the Government engage with both its Iranian and Iraqi counterparts to ease concerns in this area and that it work to encourage Washington to take a similar approach. We further conclude that serious concerns exist over Iranian involvement in Iraq and that the organisation, weaponry and technology for a number of terrorist incidents in Iraq have emanated from within Iran. (Paragraph 265) 31. We conclude that the reconstruction process has been made extremely difficult by the insurgency, both by sabotage and by the level of violence to personnel involved; however, the lack of progress risks dissatisfaction with the political process. We recommend that the Government set out in its response to this Report its plans to make reconstruction efforts more effective as well as its plans, if any, to take part in setting up Provincial Reconstruction Teams in Iraq. (Paragraph 275) 32. We conclude that conditions remain extremely difficult for British personnel in Iraq and commend the good work they are doing in testing circumstances. We recommend that the Government update us in its response to this Report on the number of British personnel in Iraq, their location and its plans to improve facilities further. (Paragraph 279) Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 9 33. We conclude that the deterioration in the security situation and the continuing difficulties in relations with the local communities in Basra are deeply worrying. We commend efforts that have been made to build bridges and repair relations. We recommend that the Government set out in its response to this Report what further steps it is taking to improve the situation in the four south-eastern provinces of Iraq and to bring about a resolution of the differences between Shia groups. (Paragraph 286) 34. We conclude that there remain significant disagreements about the timing of the decision to go to war with Iraq. We recommend that the Government set out in its response to this Report the chronology of when decisions were made with regard to the Iraq war, including publication of the memorandum of the conversation between the Prime Minister and President Bush on 31 January 2004. (Paragraph 291) Iran 35. We conclude that there is clear cause for international concern over Iranian nuclear intentions and a number of substantive issues have yet to be resolved, as spelled out in successive IAEA reports. We further conclude that the Government is correct to take extremely seriously the possibility that Iran is seeking to acquire nuclear weapons. A nuclear armed Iran would radically alter the security geography of the region and would lead other countries to seek nuclear weapons or guarantees themselves. (Paragraph 303) 36. We conclude that despite achieving a high degree of international agreement about the need to address Iran’s nuclear ambitions, there has been a worrying lack of consensus among the Permanent Members of the UNSC on how best to tackle this problem. We commend the Government’s commitment to diplomatic efforts to resolve the nuclear standoff with Iran. We sincerely regret the breakdown of negotiations in 2005 and Iran’s resumption of enrichment activities. We commend the international consensus achieved among members of the IAEA Governing Board and the efforts taken to maintain this consensus in the decision to report Iran to the UN Security Council. We also commend renewed efforts by the EU3 to resolve the crisis by diplomatic means and we recommend that the Government keep us informed of the progress of these negotiations. (Paragraph 312) 37. We commend the high-level cooperation between the United Kingdom, France and Germany in their negotiations with Iran. We conclude that US engagement will be an essential component of any lasting agreement and commend US involvement in the current EU3 diplomatic initiative. We recommend that the Government use its close relationship with the USA to encourage it to engage further with Iran and that it set out in its response to this Report what steps it is taking to do this. (Paragraph 324) 38. We conclude that a broad range of options are available to the international community with regard to Iran, but that that some are fraught with difficulty. We further conclude that in the interest of legitimacy as well as effectiveness it is highly desirable that maximum international consensus is maintained on any action taken against Iran. (Paragraph 332) 10 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 39. We conclude that military action against Iran would be likely to unleash a host of extremely serious consequences both in the Middle East and elsewhere and would not be guaranteed to prevent Iran from developing nuclear weapons in the long term. We further conclude that the Government should not undertake or support military action against Iran until all other options have been exhausted or without broad agreement among its international allies. We also conclude that the lack of international consensus for sanctions against Iran combined with the extremely worrying prospect of military action mean that all possible diplomatic efforts must be applied to reaching a negotiated agreement with Iran; we recommend that the Government make this point absolutely clear to the administration in Washington. (Paragraph 340) 40. We conclude that Iran’s position towards the ‘war against terrorism’ has been contradictory, and extremely unhelpful in a number of key areas. Iran continues to have links with terrorist groups, while statements by the Iranian president about Israel and denial of the Holocaust are deplorable and cannot be dismissed as empty rhetoric. We commend the Prime Minister’s robust response to these comments and recommend that the Government continue to make clear to the Iranian Government that such behaviour and comments are unacceptable. (Paragraph 353) 41. We conclude that the human rights situation in Iran remains extremely unsatisfactory. We recommend that the Government continue to use its diplomatic contacts with the Iranian government to promote respect for human rights and political and religious freedoms, and actively encourage the EU to do likewise. We further conclude that the democratic process in Iran is deeply flawed, and that although this issue must be handled with care, there is a role for the United Kingdom and the international community more broadly in supporting reform efforts. We recommend that the Government seriously consider funding a Farsi BBC television service. (Paragraph 361) Afghanistan 42. We conclude that bringing stability to Afghanistan remains a key British interest. We commend the Government for its role in hosting and co-chairing the London Conference and welcome the Prime Minister’s comments that the United Kingdom will remain by the side of the Afghan people in their struggle for freedom, moderation and democracy. (Paragraph 366) 43. We conclude that there has been a worrying deterioration in the security situation in Afghanistan, and that there are signs that the tactics that have brought such devastation to Iraq are being replicated in Afghanistan. We recommend that in its response to this Report the Government indicate what steps it is taking to prevent further deterioration. (Paragraph 371) 44. We commend the Government’s work assisting the Afghan authorities to establish secure prison facilities and in providing training in prison techniques. We recommend that the Government set out in its response to this Report what further assistance it could give in this area, particularly in respect of increasing the Afghan capacity to house drug offenders at the provincial level. (Paragraph 377) Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 11 45. We reiterate our predecessor’s Committee’s conclusion that “the United Kingdom’s lead role in co-ordinating the UN’s counter-narcotics strategy in Afghanistan is one of the Government’s most important responsibilities overseas”. We conclude that negligible progress has been made reducing opium poppy cultivation in Afghanistan. We recommend that the Government set out in its response to this Report how it intends to make better progress in tackling this problem. We further recommend that the Government clarify its position towards eradication and that it set out what progress has been made on developing alternative livelihoods for Afghan farmers. (Paragraph 383) 46. We conclude that there is potential for a blurring of the United Kingdom’s counterinsurgency and counter-narcotics objectives in Afghanistan. We recommend that the Government clarify the role of British personnel, including with regard to the policy of eradication and support to eradication activities. We further conclude that the expansion of ISAF’s area of operation requires careful consideration of how best to coordinate with the US-led Operation Enduring Freedom. We reiterate our predecessor Committee’s conclusion that “increased synergy between and better integration of NATO’s operations in Afghanistan and those of the US-led coalition is a potentially positive move, which if correctly implemented should enhance the effectiveness of security, reconstruction and counter-terrorist activities alike”. We recommend that the Government update us in its response to this Report on NATO planning to achieve this greater synergy. (Paragraph 391) Non-proliferation 47. We conclude that the failure of the May 2005 NPT Review Conference is a matter of serious concern. We recommend that the Government do all in its power to sustain the NPT, as the most effective tool for the prevention of the proliferation of nuclear weapons. (Paragraph 401) 48. We recommend that the Government set out in its response to this Report what it is doing to strengthen the non-proliferation tools available to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), and set out its views on the proposals for strengthening the IAEA put forward by Director General Dr Mohammed ElBaradei. We further recommend that the Government work with its IAEA partners to establish a permanent section of the IAEA dealing with nuclear proliferation by non-state actors, with adequate and sustainable funding arrangements. (Paragraph 406) 49. We recommend that the Government set out in its response to this Report what impact the agreement between New Delhi and Washington on nuclear co-operation might have on the existing non-proliferation framework. We also recommend that in its response to this Report the Government set out what progress has been made on introducing revisions to the guidelines of the Nuclear Suppliers Group. (Paragraph 409) 50. We conclude that the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT) is a crucial tool for the control of the spread of nuclear weapons, and the work of the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty Organisation (CTBTO) is both technically impressive and of great worth. We recommend that the Government urge those states that have not yet ratified the CTBT to do so, concentrating its efforts on the states which have not 12 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism ratified for technical reasons, such as Colombia, Indonesia and Vietnam. (Paragraph 414) 51. We conclude that a successful outcome of the Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention (BWC) Review Conference is essential in order to preserve confidence in the global non-proliferation regime. We recommend that the Government outline what progress has been made by the various meetings of experts and state parties since the middle of 2005, and set out what it hopes to achieve at the Review Conference. We also recommend that the Government explain how it proposes to ensure compliance with the BWC without the existence of a verification mechanism. (Paragraph 419) 52. We conclude that universality of the Chemical Weapons Convention is a most desirable objective, and we recommend that the Government step up its efforts to encourage Middle Eastern states such as Egypt, Israel, Lebanon, and Syria to ratify the CWC. We also conclude that the destruction of chemical weapons is a priority, and recommend that the Government urge other states to accelerate the destruction of their chemical weapons. (Paragraph 422) 53. We conclude that the work of the G8 Global Partnership makes a valuable contribution to the reduction of nuclear and chemical weapons material in the former Soviet Union, although the slow progress on plutonium and chemical weapon destruction is a serious concern. We recommend that the Government set out in its response to this Report how it will maintain the momentum behind the G8 Global Partnership. We also recommend that it explore the possibilities of expanding the Partnership’s work beyond the borders of the former Soviet Union. (Paragraph 428) 54. We welcome the Government’s outreach work on the Missile Technology Control Regime (MTCR) and we recommend that in its response to this Report the Government set out what further steps it is planning to take in this area. We also welcome India’s decision to comply with MTCR guidelines voluntarily, and we recommend that the Government work to encourage India to become a full member of the MTCR. However, we conclude that the spread of knowledge of cruise missile and space programme related technology may outpace the MTCR’s best efforts, and we recommend that the Government set out in its response to this Report how it will ensure that the MTCR keeps pace with the spread of technology and what steps it will take to give the MTCR greater enforceability. (Paragraph 432) 55. We welcome the expansion of the Wassenaar Arrangement, both in terms of membership and its trigger lists, but fear that the organisation will continue to work at the lowest common denominator. We recommend that the Government explore means to strengthen the Wassenaar Arrangement, perhaps by establishing an inspections regime. We also conclude that the lack of interaction between the Wassenaar Arrangement and UN bodies dealing with small arms and light weapons hinders the effective implementation of an international non-proliferation regime on small arms and might have a deleterious impact on the establishment of an Arms Trade Treaty (ATT). We recommend that the Government work to bring the Wassenaar Arrangement into closer collaboration with the UN and other international efforts related to the ATT. (Paragraph 437) Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 56. 13 We welcome progress towards an international ATT and recommend that the Government continue its work to garner support for such a treaty. However, we recommend that the Government does not allow its desire to establish internationally accepted norms lead to a treaty that operates only at the lowest common denominator. (Paragraph 440) Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 15 1 Introduction 1. This is the seventh Report in a series on foreign policy aspects of the ‘war against terrorism’. Our predecessor Committee launched this inquiry following the 11 September 2001 terrorist attacks in the USA. These Reports, supplemented by other Reports on the decision to go to war in Iraq, on British–US relations and on human rights, have contributed to the ongoing debate on both the causes of terrorism and the United Kingdom’s response to it. During the course of the inquiry, the Committee has discussed wide and varied themes, such as the fall of the Taliban and efforts to rebuild Afghanistan, shifts in the organisation of al Qaeda, the war and subsequent situation in Iraq, multilateral efforts to tackle terrorist financing and global work to prevent the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction. 2. In this Report, we return to a number of these themes. We discuss the fast developing situations in Israel and the Palestinian Territories, Iraq and Iran. However, for the first time we also discuss in some detail the United Kingdom’s relations with Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates and the role of these two countries in the international ‘war against terrorism’. Both countries were linked to the attacks of 11 September: fifteen of the nineteen suicide aeroplane hijackers were Saudi citizens; two were UAE nationals. In addition, both Saudi Arabia and the UAE have significant experience fighting terrorism, both through security-based counter-terrorism measures and by tackling the causes of terrorism through educational reform and cooperation with religious authorities. Not only are both countries key allies in the fight against international terrorism, but there is also much that could be learned from their efforts to understand and thwart recruitment of extremists. 3. Although for consistency with our previous Reports we have entitled this one ‘Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism’, we have come to the conclusion that the phrase ‘war against terrorism’ is inappropriate. The phrase may initially have seemed an adequate description for international efforts in the context of the attacks of 11 September and subsequent action against the Taliban in Afghanistan. However, it does not adequately describe what has become a multi-faceted and complex international effort to thwart terrorist attacks across the globe simultaneously with attempts to address the background to international terrorism. We shall give further consideration to providing a more appropriate phrase when we produce our next Report on countering terrorism. 4. If any reminder were needed of the continuing threat posed by international terrorism, on 7 July 2005 four suicide attacks in London left 56 dead and hundreds injured. The bombers were British, but their crimes were committed against a backdrop of global terrorism. In March 2006, the FCO published its new strategy document “Active Diplomacy for a Changing World.” This document sets out nine strategic international priorities for the United Kingdom: • Making the world safer from global terrorism and weapons of mass destruction. • Reducing the harm to the UK from international crime, including drug trafficking, people smuggling and money laundering. 16 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism • Preventing and resolving conflict through a strong international system. • Building an effective and globally competitive EU in a secure neighbourhood. • Supporting the UK economy and business through an open and expanding global economy, science and innovation and secure energy supplies. • Promoting sustainable development and poverty reduction underpinned by human rights, democracy, good governance and protection of the environment. • Managing migration and combating illegal immigration. • Delivering high-quality support for British nationals abroad, in normal times and in crises. • Ensuring the security and good governance of the UK’s Overseas Territories.1 5. Many of these priorities are relevant to international efforts to fight terrorism and the circumstances in which extremism and terrorism flourish. Critically, the document states that “The priorities cannot be pursued in isolation. They intersect in many of the urgent international problems the UK faces, such as the search for peace in the Middle East and South Asia, the reconstruction of Afghanistan and Iraq, or dealing more effectively with poverty and conflict around the world.” Throughout the course of the Committee’s inquiry into foreign policy aspects of the ‘war against terrorism’, it has become clear not only that the ‘war against terrorism’ must consider wider and more complex issues than terrorism itself, but that the development and implementation of policy to protect British interests must be carried out as part of a coherent foreign policy strategy. 6. Much of the evidence taken for this Report was received before the change of Foreign Secretary, and therefore was provided by Jack Straw ahead of the appointment of Margaret Beckett in May 2006. We heard oral evidence from Jack Straw on three occasions. We also held discussions with senior figures at the UN in New York, with members of the US Administration in Washington DC, with key personnel in the European Commission and with ministers, politicians, senior officials and others in Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Israel, the Palestinian Territories and Iraq. We also heard formal and informal evidence from a range of witnesses and received written evidence from a variety of sources; we express our thanks to all of these. 1 Foreign & Commonwealth Office, Active Diplomacy for a Changing World: The UK’s International Priorities, Cm 6762, March 2006. In June 2006, the new Foreign Secretary, Margaret Beckett, added a further strategic priority of climate change. Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 2 17 The ongoing threat from terrorism Continuing International Threat 7. In response to the terrorist attacks of 11 September 2001, the USA and its allies adopted a policy of targeting al Qaeda’s senior leadership, infrastructure and funding networks. Speaking in October 2005, US President George Bush outlined some of the successes of this campaign: Together, we’ve killed or captured nearly all of those directly responsible for the September the 11th attacks; as well as some of bin Laden’s most senior deputies; al Qaeda managers and operatives in more than 24 countries; the mastermind of the USS Cole bombing, who was chief of al Qaeda operations in the Persian Gulf; the mastermind of the Jakarta and the first Bali bombings; a senior Zarqawi terrorist planner, who was planning attacks in Turkey; and many of al Qaeda’s senior leaders in Saudi Arabia.2 8. The White House responded to an audio message by Osama bin Laden broadcast by al Jazeera satellite television station on 23 April 2006 by saying: “The al Qaeda leadership is on the run and under a lot of pressure. We are continuing to take the fight to the enemy abroad, and making it difficult for them to plan and plot against America. We are on the advance, they are on the run, and we will not let up...We will prevail. It's important that we continue to use every tool at our disposal as we take the fight to the enemy.”3 More recently, President Bush described the killing of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the head of al Qaeda in Iraq, as a severe blow to al Qaeda.4 9. Paul Wilkinson, Professor of International Relations and Chair of the Centre for the Study of Terrorism and Political Violence at the University of St Andrews, wrote to us about the impact of the international ‘war against terrorism’: Al Qaeda’s core leadership, communication and training capabilities suffered major disruption and damage when the Taleban regime in Afghanistan, which had provided Al Qaeda with safe haven, was overthrown in autumn 2001. Since 9/11, 15 leading Al Qaeda militants have been captured or killed, and over 3,000 suspected Al Qaeda followers have been arrested or detained. Moreover, millions of pounds of Al Qaeda assets have been frozen in the banking system.5 A letter believed to be from Osama bin Laden’s deputy, Ayman al-Zawahiri, to Zarqawi, suggests that al Qaeda has indeed felt the impact of this campaign. In the letter, Zawahiri says that al Qaeda has lost many of its key leaders and is virtually resigned to defeat in Afghanistan. He also says that its lines of communication and funding have been severely disrupted and makes a plea for financial support.6 2 Remarks by President Bush, National Endowment for Democracy, Washington D.C., 6 October 2005 3 Press Gaggle by Scott McClellan, 23 April 2006 4 “Zarqawi killed in Iraq air raid”, BBC News Online, 8 June 2006, news.bbc.co.uk 5 Ev 1 6 “US 'intercepts al-Qaeda letter’'’, BBC News Online, 7 October 2005, news.bbc.co.uk 18 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 10. However, despite the claimed successes of the campaign, international terrorists nevertheless clearly retain the capacity to strike across the world. Professor Wilkinson wrote to us about the enduring threat: In attack after attack Al Qaeda’s network of networks has proved its ability to deploy large numbers of operatives and to recruit more than sufficient new members to replace those lost by capture and death in suicide bombing or in armed confrontations with security forces… There is no evidence that the movement is unable to obtain the funds and explosives it needs to carry out major coordinated mass-killing suicide bombing attacks.7 In fact, there is broad consensus that al Qaeda continues to represent the most dangerous terrorist threat ever posed by a non-state actor. With a presence in over 60 countries, it is al Qaeda’s explicit commitment to mass killing that makes it so dangerous. Professor Wilkinson, told us about this: I think we must not underestimate the sheer ruthlessness and brutality of this movement. It is still acting on the decree, the fatwa that was issued by bin Laden in February 1988 in which all Muslims were urged to kill Americans and their allies, including civilians, whenever and wherever possible… Fortunately they have not succeeded in doing anything as ambitious or as deadly as the 9/11 attacks, although they certainly have plotted to undertake more deadly attacks. In some cases those conspiracies have been thwarted. In some cases we believe the plans may still exist, they just have not been implemented, and it is a worry that they may still try to implement them.8 11. On 24 October 2005, the then Foreign Secretary also highlighted the brutality of the threat posed by al Qaeda when he described to us the indiscriminate nature of terrorist attacks and the fact that they “really do not mind who they kill provided they kill somebody in the name of a totally perverted ideology. It is a further illustration of the evil which we are dealing with.”9 12. While agreeing about the extreme danger posed by al Qaeda, Peter Taylor, of BBC Panorama, also warned against the tendency of attributing every terrorist incident to al Qaeda: “there is a danger of putting the al Qaeda stamp on everything that happens— sometimes it is justified, sometimes it is not—nevertheless, the threat that these new kind of cells that subscribe to the same philosophy as al Qaeda and bin Laden are extremely dangerous and I think the evidence speaks for itself.”10 13. Indeed, the evidence does speak for itself. There has been no let up in terrorist attacks across the world since our predecessor Committee’s last Report in this inquiry.11 Since that Report, terrorism has hit at the heart of the United Kingdom. On 7 July 2005, four suicide 7 Ev 2 8 Q 8 [Professor Wilkinson] 9 Q 56 10 Q 1 [Mr Taylor] 11 Foreign Affairs Committee, Sixth Report of Session 2004-05, Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism, HC 36–I Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 19 bombers from a home-grown group inspired by al Qaeda struck in central London, killing 52 people and injuring hundreds.12 The report into the attacks by the Intelligence and Security Committee found that two of the bombers spent time in Pakistan: “It has not yet been established who they met in Pakistan, but it is assessed as likely that they had some contact with Al Qaida figures.”13 The degree of al Qaeda involvement remains under investigation:14 “The extent to which the 7 July attacks were externally planned, directed or controlled by contacts in Pakistan or elsewhere remains unclear. The Agencies believe that some form of operational training is likely to have taken place while Khan and Tanweer were in Pakistan. Contacts in the run-up to the attacks suggest they may have had advice or direction from individuals there. Claims in the media that a ‘mastermind’ left the UK the day before the attacks reflect one strand of an investigation that was subsequently discounted by the intelligence and security Agencies.”15 Two weeks after the 7 July attacks, on 21 July, four would-be-bombers targeted London’s transport system once again; none of their devices exploded. 14. Elsewhere, on 23 July 2005, two car bombs and a bomb placed in a suitcase in the Egyptian tourist resort of Sharm el Sheikh killed at least 88 people, including 11 British tourists.16 The region was targeted once again on 24 April 2006, when a series of explosions in the Egyptian seaside resort of Dahab killed at least 23 people and injured more than 60.17 The Egyptian authorities have blamed the attacks on local groups ‘inspired’ by international extremist ideology. Tourists were once again the target on 1 October 2005, when three suicide bombers killed at least 23 people and injured around 150 people in Bali, Indonesia.18 On 9 November 2005, a triple bomb attack in Amman in Jordan left at least 56 dead and around 100 injured.19 Meanwhile, the insurgency in Iraq continues to blaze, with a rising death toll, and the situation in Afghanistan has deteriorated, with an increase in the number of terrorist attacks and evidence that the Taliban is regrouping. We discuss both countries in greater detail later in this Report. 15. We conclude that despite a number of successes targeting the leadership and infrastructure of al Qaeda, the danger of international terrorism, whether from al Qaeda or other related groups, has not diminished and may well have increased. Al Qaeda continues to pose an extremely serious and brutal threat to the United Kingdom and its interests. 12 Home Office, Report of the Official Account of the Bombings in London on 7th July 2005, 11 May 2006, HC 1087. This report found that: “55. There is as yet no firm evidence to corroborate this claim or the nature of Al Qaida support, if there was any. But, the target and mode of attack of the 7 July bombings are typical of Al Qaida and those inspired by its ideologies.” 13 Intelligence and Security Committee, Report into the London Terrorist Attacks on 7 July 2005, Cm 6785, May 2006, para 37 14 Ibid, para 40 15 Ibid, para 38 16 “Toll climbs in Egyptian attacks”, BBC News Online, 23 July 2005, news.bbc.co.uk 17 “Explosions at Egyptian Red Sea resort kill at least 23”, Financial Times, 25 April 2006 18 “Bali bombs death toll rises to 23”, BBC News Online, 8 October 2005, news.bbc.co.uk 19 “’Al-Qaeda’ claims Jordan attacks”, BBC News Online, 10 November 2005, news.bbc.co.uk 20 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism Developments in al Qaeda 16. The international ‘war against terrorism’ has had a marked impact on al Qaeda. Peter Taylor told us about this: [T]here is a fundamental change in the nature of al Qaeda and its associated, but not necessarily directly related, groupings. That is the result of the successes that the coalition had in removing the jihadi training camps in Afghanistan. Al Qaeda was denied a base in Afghanistan, it tried to set up bases in places like Fallujah, in Iraq. They were destroyed again by the coalition forces. My understanding is that in the course of interrogation of senior or middle ranking al Qaeda people they said they were under orders to return to their countries of origin to recruit and train for Jihad on home ground, recruiting home-grown would be jihadis, and I think what the recent attacks show is the operation of those semi autonomous cells that do not necessarily have any directly linear connection with al Qaeda. The 9/11 attacks were the result of al Qaeda planning. Al Qaeda was the command and control centre. It no longer works like that, so these cells are their protean: they change; they are autonomous, or semi-autonomous. What binds them together is a common association with the philosophy of bin Laden and al Qaeda.20 17. This shift has implications for international efforts to tackle terrorism. Professor Wilkinson and Peter Taylor both told us about this: “it does make it far more difficult for the intelligence services and the whole intelligence community of the coalition against terrorism to track down cells and to identify new networks as they are created, but it is even more complex than that.”21 Moreover, its diffuse structure gives al Qaeda “the flexibility and resilience to adapt and sustain its global jihad in spite of the many severe blows the movement has suffered.”22 18. Our witnesses were all deeply concerned about the boost that the war in Iraq has given to al Qaeda. Peter Taylor told us about this: “they manipulate the situation in Iraq… They use the situation there to recruit, to propagandise, to fund raise, to train and also to plan and operate.” 23 Jack Straw concurred on this point, telling us: “It is self-evidently the truth that al Qaeda et cetera are exploiting what is going on in Iraq.”24 The situation in Iraq is a gift to al Qaeda in terms of propaganda. Peter Taylor told us that recorded attacks and beheadings in Iraq are “one of the most powerful recruiting tools that they have”.25 Indeed, Peter Taylor told us that by going into Iraq, “what we have done is fanned the flames of terrorism rather than subdue them.”26 19. Professor Wilkinson wrote to us about the importance of al Qaeda’s experience in Iraq in terms of training: 20 Q 1 [Mr Taylor] 21 Q 1 [Professor Wilkinson] and Q 13 [Mr Taylor] 22 Ev 1 23 Q 14 [Mr Taylor] 24 Q 65 25 Q 14 [Mr Taylor] 26 Q 17 [Mr Taylor] Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 21 By far the more important capability for carrying out local attacks is the availability of expertise, especially in bomb making, operational planning and tactics. The Al Qaeda network’s supply of well-trained and experienced terrorist operatives has been enormously increased as a result of the field experience provided in the Iraq conflict. Foreign terrorists who have been involved with the Al Qaeda Jihad in Mesopotamia led by the Jordanian Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, are now able to return to their countries of origin, including the EU member states, battle hardened and with skills acquired and honed in Iraq. It is also noteworthy that in recent weeks we have seen tactics methods copied from the terrorist campaign in Iraq being used in Afghanistan by Taleban and Al Qaeda-linked groups and their Afghan warlord allies to attack.27 20. Despite this rather gloomy picture, our witnesses gave us some cause for optimism. There has been some evidence of strategic and ideological divisions within the broad al Qaeda movement. This has been precipitated by the targeting of Muslims in suicide attacks in Iraq and elsewhere. A letter believed to be from Zawahiri to Zarqawi warns that insurgents’ tactics, notably the killing of hostages and bombings of mosques, may alienate the wider Muslim population.28 Professor Wilkinson told us about this: I do not think all the networking arrangements necessarily favour the al Qaeda movement, because when you have a movement which is constituted of a network of networks worldwide there are bound to be some that begin to differ from the core leadership in its strategy and tactics, and we are beginning to see that. We see it in the communication that was intercepted between Zawahiri and Zarqawi… [W]here one sees a schism, where you see people with some political criticisms of a leadership, that is a hopeful sign because the history of terrorism shows that when they start to quarrel with each other that is the beginning of their decline.29 21. We conclude that the dispersal and fragmentation of al Qaeda into more autonomous local cells mainly linked together by a common ideology will make it more difficult to tackle the threat of international terrorism. We further conclude that the situation in Iraq has provided both a powerful source of propaganda for Islamist extremists and also a crucial training ground for international terrorists associated with al Qaeda. Public diplomacy and human rights 22. Professor Wilkinson wrote to us about some of the successes and failures of the international community’s counter-terrorism policy. He highlighted the importance of international cooperation, despite the deep divisions that were caused by the war in Iraq. Professor Wilkinson also emphasised the success that EU member states have had in “using their criminal justice systems to try persons suspected of involvement in al Qaeda linked terrorism” as well as “the un-dramatic but vital work of capacity building in the developing countries, for example the assistance programme of the FCO in disseminating expertise in anti-terrorism law, policing and intelligence work and the work of the 27 Ev 2 28 “US 'intercepts al-Qaeda letter’'’, BBC News Online, 7 October 2005, news.bbc.co.uk 29 Qq 2, 8 [Professor Wilkinson] 22 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism international agencies such as ICAO, IATA and ACI in enhancing aviation security and of IMO in maritime security.” He also noted the progress that has been made on counterterrorism cooperation in Europe “for example through the Europe Arrest Warrant mechanism, and the enhanced intelligence sharing and judicial cooperation procedures through EUROPOL, SITCEN, and EUROJUST.”30 23. However, our witnesses argued that al Qaeda is doing rather better than the international community when it comes to public diplomacy. Peter Taylor has looked in some detail at al Qaeda’s use of the internet as a propaganda tool. In one of his Panorama programmes, Taylor noted that: “al Qaeda has changed, the internet has given it wings… al Qaeda has become a global brand, driven by the power of the worldwide web.”31 Professor Wilkinson also wrote to us about the importance that al Qaeda attaches to propaganda: “Al Qaeda videotapes and websites demonstrate the great importance they attach to propaganda. Recently they have expanded into broadcasting their own news programme called Voice of the Caliphate which attempts to use world events to put over their movement’s perverted doctrines.”32 24. The conduct of the international community’s foreign policy, and the exploitation of perceived injustices in this policy, are central to al Qaeda’s propaganda. Key international conflicts such as those between Israel and the Palestinians and between India and Pakistan over Kashmir, and the situation in Iraq, are fed into this propaganda. Peter Taylor told us about the role that such conflicts play in recruitment: “potential recruits are identified at radical mosques but the actual indoctrination—the showing of videos, of Palestine, of Chechnya, of Kashmir and increasingly of Iraq—is done privately in apartments, flats, etc, afterwards.”33 25. This point is illustrated by bin Laden’s audio message, broadcast on 23 April 2006.34 This message accused the West of waging a war against Islam and sought to identify with the Palestinian cause, which resonates strongly with Muslims across the world. Bin Laden said: “Our countries are burning, our homes are being shelled and our peoples are being killed and nobody cares about us. An example of the blatant attacks on our beliefs, our brothers and our countries is what your ally, Israel, did in terms of storming and demolishing Jericho Prison with the collusion of America and Britain.” He expanded to cover other perceived injustices of the West’s foreign policy: “An example of ridiculing people and holding them in contempt is that your aircraft and tanks are destroying houses over the heads of our kinfolk and children in Palestine, Iraq, Afghanistan, Chechnya, and Pakistan… They are determined to continue with their Crusader campaigns against our nation, to occupy our countries, to plunder our resources, and to enslave us.” Bin Laden also asserted that the role of al Qaeda is to defend Muslims across the world “Our aim is clear: that is, defending Islam, its people, and land.” 30 Ev 3 31 The New Al Qaeda, Part One 32 Ev 1 33 Q 1 [Mr Taylor] 34 “'Bin Laden' accuses West—excerpts”, BBC News Online, 23 April 2006, news.bbc.co.uk Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 23 26. There is a clear recognition of the need for the international ‘war against terrorism’ to be multi-faceted. In October 2005, the then Foreign Secretary told us that in addition to the security focussed aspects of counter terrorism policy, the United Kingdom and its allies are: [S]eeking to deal with the causes of terrorism, for example, in the work we have done over many years to support the Middle East Peace Process, the very active engagement of the United States and United Kingdom Governments, Colin Powell, Secretary Condoleezza Rice, myself in the Peace Process in respect of Kashmir, many other theatres, and the work which we and the UK Government are doing both with the Home Office and the Foreign Office to improve understanding of Islam and to give those who are of the Islamic faith greater confidence to stand up against these evil people; all of that is the only strategy that is sensible to follow.35 27. While Jack Straw told us that he thought “We would be naive if we thought if we eliminated those problems, this infection will go”,36 he also said that “if we want to engage the minds of people in the Islamic world we need to see better progress, for example on the Middle East Peace Process.”37 Asked whether the United Kingdom is doing enough to counter terrorist propaganda, the former Foreign Secretary told us: “I think we can never do enough to counter the propaganda, it is a most extraordinary moral relativism. We have to counter it and we have to say there are some absolutes in our society.”38 However, Jack Straw also noted the work that is being done in this area, for example the FCO’s Engaging with the Islamic World Programme.39 28. During a visit to Indonesia in March 2006, Prime Minister Tony Blair emphasised the need for greater understanding between people of different faiths, adding that “within that greater understanding we’ve got a chance of resolving the conflicts that there are in the world.”40 There have also been efforts to communicate better with the Muslim community worldwide. For example, ‘British Muslims’, a recent publication by the British Council, seeks to inform the dialogue between communities.41 However, all of our witnesses were clear in their opinion that the United Kingdom and its allies should be doing far more in this area. Professor Wilkinson told us: I think we are failing on this particular score. The Americans are only spending, we discovered, 3 per cent of their entire defence budget on public diplomacy on information. If you compare that with the Cold War years where information was so important—it ultimately helped us to end the Cold War—I think it is absolutely incompetent of us not to be doing more to use all the channels of communication that are open to us. We have the people with the language expertise, we have the media technology, but we are not making enough use of it, in my view, and I think that is a big failing: because as long as those ideas are unanswered, we are really 35 Q 56 36 Q 57 37 Q 58 38 Q 57 39 Q 58 40 “Blair vows to boost defence ties with Jakarta”, Financial Times, 31 March 2006 41 The British Council, British Muslims: Media Guide, 2006 24 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism creating new generations of suicide bombers while we are busy trying to unravel the existing networks and new ones are emerging… [I]f only we had invested the effort, and I think it is not too late. We should be doing far more of that. The money we spent on it would be chicken feed compared to the sort of money that is being spent on the deployment of our forces and the expensive technology that that requires.42 29. Peter Taylor told us about the role that the BBC could play in this area: The BBC Arabic Service, which is in the planning, will not be a propaganda vehicle. That is not the BBC’s job. We are not in the business of propaganda. What it will do, I am sure, is present an alternative or a different perspective on events to that propounded by an Al Jazeera, which has been phenomenally successful. You go into any Arab cafe in America or anywhere and they are not watching BBC World, they are watching Al Jazeera; so I think the advent of a BBC Arabic service will go some way towards correcting the perceptions, but I stress, it will not be a propaganda vehicle, it will be a sort of corrective, if you like.43 30. We conclude that propaganda is one of the major tools in al Qaeda’s arsenal. We further conclude that progress towards resolving key international conflicts would go some way to removing widespread feelings of injustice in the Muslim world that feed into the causes of and support for terrorism. Although the United Kingdom and its allies recognise this, and are working to resolve these conflicts, they are putting insufficient effort and funding into countering terrorist propaganda. Much greater effort needs to be made to communicate effectively with the Arab and Islamic world in order to bridge the gulf of mistrust that feeds into international terrorism. We recommend that the Government continue to engage with Muslim leaders and clerics who speak out against distorted and extremist versions of their faith. We commend the Government’s Engaging with the Islamic World Programme as well as the decision to set up an Arabic BBC World Service television station, but note that it will initially broadcast for only 12 hours a day and be much less generously funded than al Jazeera, which is heavily subsidised by the government of Qatar. We conclude that much more could be done. We recommend that the Government set out in its response to this Report what plans it has to expand its work in this field. We also recommend that the BBC World Service carry out an evaluation of the cost-effectiveness of this expenditure. 31. Professor Wilkinson wrote to us about the impact of international policy on human rights: There has been a tragic failure to wage the battle of ideas against the extremists who preach hatred and incite people to commit terrorism. All democratic governments, including our own have a special responsibility to actively promote democratic values, the rule of law and human rights… Action counts far more than words in the difficult world of upholding democratic values and human rights. If the behaviour of 42 Q 15 [Professor Wilkinson] 43 Q 15 [Mr Taylor] Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 25 democratic states flatly contradicts our stated values we lose our credibility in the battle of ideas worldwide.44 Two areas of policy with regard to the international ‘war against terrorism’ have caused particular concern vis a vis human rights: Guantánamo Bay and extraordinary rendition. Guantánamo Bay 32. The US government has claimed that the detention camp at Guantánamo Bay, which has been used to hold suspected al Qaeda terrorists since shortly after the attacks of 11 September 2001, plays a key role in the ‘war against terrorism’. However, its existence has been extremely controversial, especially among human rights groups, many of which have condemned what they believe are extralegal detentions at the camp. Current criticism centres on the continuing detention of about 500 people, including nine individuals previously resident in the United Kingdom and one Australian citizen currently seeking British citizenship, and allegations of abuses committed at the Guantánamo Bay prison complex. The USA has made moves recently to release 140 of the detainees; in April 2006, the Pentagon announced that 141 detainees could no longer be classified as enemy combatants and would be freed.45 Positively, it has also now released the names of all those held at the camp. 33. Amnesty International has attacked the system of detentions, saying: The detention camp at the US Naval Base in Guantánamo Bay in Cuba has become a symbol of the US administration’s refusal to put human rights and the rule of law at the heart of its response to the atrocities of 11 September 2001. Hundreds of people of around 35 different nationalities remain held in effect in a legal black hole, many without access to any court, legal counsel or family visits. As evidence of torture and widespread cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment mounts, it is more urgent than ever that the US Government bring the Guantánamo Bay detention camp and any other facilities it is operating outside the USA into full compliance with international law and standards. The only alternative is to close them down.46 34. We asked Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch for evidence that torture is being used at Guantánamo Bay. Kate Allen, Director of Amnesty International UK, told us: “I think we have very strong accounts, particularly from young men from Tipton, who documented on their return to the UK what had happened to them, of being kept awake, of loud music, of threats being made to them, of being held and interrogated endlessly day after day… I think that amounts to torture.”47 Ms Allen went on to say: “I think if you hold people incommunicado and you interrogate them endlessly day upon day, that you have extremes of temperature that are used, that you do not allow them any contact with their families, that you have loud noise playing continuously, that you threaten people in terms 44 Ev 4 45 “Pentagon plan to free 140 from Guantanamo”, The Guardian, 26 April 2006 46 Amnesty International, Guantánamo Bay: A Human Rights Scandal, available at: web.amnesty.org 47 Foreign Affairs Committee, First Report of Session 2005–05, Human Rights Annual Report 2005, HC 574, Ev 31–32 26 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism of their lives and their well-being, I think that adds up to torture.”48 Steve Crawshaw, London Director at Human Rights Watch gave his perspective: I think it is important to remember that torture is not just applying electrodes to the testicles… to put it this way, a number of the techniques that have been used have led to both self-incriminating evidence which was completely false—in other words the pressures were great enough that they confessed to things which they had not done and provably had not done—you know, having been together with Osama bin Laden at a particular time when demonstrably, and as, indeed, the British authorities later confirmed, they had actually been somewhere else. Those kinds of pressures are banned for the same reasons… [N]ot everybody has been tortured at Guantánamo. That is not the suggestion. Some people have got off relatively lightly and others have not.49 35. In April 2006, Professor Philippe Sands QC told us his views on Guantánamo Bay: I think Guantánamo should be closed down tomorrow. Guantánamo is terribly undermining of a legitimate effort to protect against a serious threat and it is being used mainly as an indication of the values that our societies purport to hold dear not being followed when their vital interests are at stake, and I think it has been terribly undermining in that sense. I recall here a statement made by the great American diplomat, George Kennan, who wrote a famous telex in 1947 from Moscow, where he was posted for the State Department, on the emergent Soviet threat, and he ended that telex by saying, “The greatest threat that can befall us as a nation is to become like those who seek to destroy us.”50 The recent suicide of three detainees at Guantánamo Bay has reinvigorated calls for the camp to be closed down. 36. Professor Sands told us that in his view there were only two categories into which those detained at Guantánamo might fall and that they should either be treated as Prisoners of War or as Criminals. He said that there is no third category of Illegal Combatants as the US asserts. The US view is that they are not Prisoners of War and they cannot all be treated as criminals and prosecuted with due process for practical as well as legal reasons. The USA therefore argues that there is a third category of Illegal Combatants into which those detained at Guantánamo fall and that they are entitled to detain them. 37. The USA denies allegations that it is mistreating detainees and argues that Guantánamo Bay is an important tool in the ‘war against terrorism’. Speaking at Chatham House in February 2006, John Bellinger, Legal Adviser to the US Department of State, outlined the US position: [W]e believe we have been and still are engaged in an international armed conflict with al Qaida. They have attacked our embassies, our military vessels and military bases, our capital city, and our financial center. On September 11, they killed nearly 48 HC (2005–06) 574, Ev 32 49 Ibid 50 Q 314 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 27 three thousand people, including 67 British nationals. The UN Security Council has reaffirmed our right of self-defense in relation to their attacks, which were planned and launched from abroad, in resolution 1373. In the context of this conflict, we believe that the appropriate legal framework for the detention and transfer of al Qaeda is the international law of war. While domestic criminal law has been used in the past to deal with terrorism, we believe that traditional systems of criminal justice, which were designed for different needs, do not adequately address the threat posed by this enemy, which continues to plan and launch attacks of a magnitude and sophistication previously achievable only by organized states.51 Mr Bellinger went on to set out the USA’s position on torture: “In its activities relating to detainees, the United States Government complies with its Constitution, its laws, and its treaty obligations. We have made clear our position on torture: U.S. criminal law and treaty obligations prohibit torture, and United States policy is not to engage or condone torture anywhere… Where there have been cases of unlawful treatment of detainees, the U.S. has vigorously investigated and, where the facts have warranted it, prosecuted and punished those responsible.” 38. During her visit to Blackburn on 1 April 2006, US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice spelled out the difficulties that the USA faces over what to do with suspects captured in Afghanistan and elsewhere. She also reiterated the point that Guantánamo Bay is a US response to the very real threat posed by international terrorism: [W]e have to recognize that Guantanamo is there for a reason. It’s there because we captured people on battlefields, particularly in Afghanistan but sometimes, frankly, on the battlefields of our own democratic societies, who were either plotting or planning or actively engaged in terrorist activities. And we have released hundreds of people from Guantanamo. It is not as if everybody who was in Guantanamo on October 1st, 2001 or January 1st, 2002 is still in Guantanamo. We have gone out of our way to try to release people. We’ve released British citizens back to Great Britain. We've done that with many different countries. But there are some people who cannot either be safely be released to their countries or certainly safely released, and there are people for whom the value of the information that they have is still relevant to the fight against terror.52 39. The British Government has been criticised for its reticence to criticise loudly the Guantánamo Bay camp. In evidence to this Committee, Human Rights Watch said: “the UK government chooses to praise the US government even while it remains in blatant defiance of international law. As far as we are aware, the British government has not expressed its concerns about the US failure to provide the conditions in which rapporteurs can do their work. Instead, it has publicly ‘welcomed’ the alleged ‘engagement’, which has so far proved worthless.”53 For its part, Amnesty International has described the United Kingdom’s role on Guantánamo as “lamentable and not improving” since “we have moved 51 Remarks by John Bellinger, at Chatham House, 9 February 2006, available at: www.chathamhouse.org.uk 52 Remarks with British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw at Blackburn Town Hall, 1 April 2006 53 HC (2005–06) 574, Ev 27 28 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism from commenting…on Guantánamo to an attempt to offer an explanation as to why Guantánamo might be necessary.”54 40. The last Report in this inquiry called on the Government to make strong representations about the complex. The Government responded by saying that the US authorities were familiar with the British position.55 In a previous Human Rights Report, we noted the oppressive conditions and mistreatment at Guantánamo Bay and the USA’s strong denial of mistreatment at the facility as well as its determination to continue to hold detainees there. The Report also noted criticisms of the Government’s failure to engage seriously with the USA on these points as well as calls by international human rights groups for the Government to take a more publicly critical stance. Ian Pearson, the then Minister for Human Rights, was quick to reject these suggestions, telling the Committee: “We made clear to the US authorities on many occasions and at every level that we regard the circumstances under which detainees are held in Guantánamo Bay as unacceptable, and the US Government knows our view on this.”56 Notwithstanding the Minister’s comments, we concluded that the continued use of Guantánamo Bay as a detention centre outside all legal regimes diminishes the USA’s moral authority and is a hindrance to the effective pursuit of the ‘war against terrorism’. We recommended that the Government make “loud and public” its objections to such a prison regime.57 41. The Committee’s concerns were echoed by a UN report released in February 2006, which called for the closure of Guantánamo Bay as soon as possible. Among its conclusions, the Report says: Terrorism suspects should be detained in accordance with criminal procedure that respects the safeguards enshrined in relevant international law. Accordingly, the United States Government should either expeditiously bring all Guantánamo Bay detainees to trial, in compliance with articles 9(3) and 14 of ICCPR, or release them without further delay. Consideration should also be given to trying suspected terrorists before a competent international tribunal.58 The White House dismissed the report as “a discredit to the UN”, because investigators did not travel to the camp. “[The Unedited Report] selectively includes only those factual assertions needed to support those conclusions and ignores other facts that would undermine those conclusions. As a result we categorically object to most of the Unedited Report’s content and conclusions as largely without merit and not based clearly in the facts.”59 In response, the investigators said they rejected an offer to go to the prison complex because they would not have been allowed to meet the prisoners.60 54 HC (2005–06) 574, Q 6 55 Foreign & Commonwealth Office, Sixth Report of the Foreign Affairs Committee; Session 2004-05; Foreign Policy Aspects of the War Against Terrorism; Response of the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, Cm 6590, June 2005 56 HC (2005–06) 574, para 38 57 Ibid, para 39 58 United Nations Economic and Social Council, Commission on Human Rights, Situation of detainees at Guantánamo Bay, 15 February 2006 59 Situation of Detainees at Guantánamo Bay, Joint Report of the Five Holders of Mandates of Special Procedures of the Commission on Human Rights, E/CN.4/2006/120, 15 February 2006, para 3. Annex: Letter dated 31 January 2006 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 29 42. Recently, the British Government has edged towards a more critical public stance on Guantánamo Bay. In the wake of the UN report, Northern Ireland Secretary Peter Hain said that he would prefer to see the camp closed.61 The Prime Minister, who had previously referred to the prison complex as an “anomaly” that should be dealt with “sooner or later”, went further when he said on 17 March 2006 that it would be better if it were closed.62 We asked the former Foreign Secretary Jack Straw about Guantánamo Bay just two days before this, and he told us: On Guantánamo Bay…it is an anomaly which, as the Prime Minister said, will come to an end and should come to an end sooner or later, we all hope sooner. The American Government is aware of that and it is working on it, but again I simply, at the risk of repetition, say that they have practical problems. On the issue of damage to the United States’ reputation, I think views vary but it is just worth bearing in mind that the September 11 terrorist atrocities actually happened and they were not caused by the CIA or Mossad but by al Qaeda.63 43. He went on to explain that the USA’s attempts to close Guantánamo Bay had slowed because: [T]he problem they face is what to do with these individuals, which countries they go back to. In the case of British citizens, it would be straightforward, we would have them back here. I was able to negotiate that, and that has been true for citizens of a number of other countries, but their concern is that quite a number of these are Afghans. Do they go back to Afghanistan? Some are Pakistanis. Do they go back to other countries? In what circumstances can they transfer them? There is a process taking place.64 Notwithstanding the practical difficulties of closing the camp, the right to a free and fair trial is enshrined in international instruments to which the USA and United Kingdom are party, such as the Universal Declaration on Human Rights and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. 44. We also asked Mr Straw why the Government had not made loud and public its opposition to the prison regime, and he said: I talk about the issue quite regularly to my American counterparts. They are also well aware of opinion around the world and in the United States on it, but they have just got practical problems they have got to deal with, and if we were in that situation we would have a practical problem, too. I do just say that if September 11 had happened addressed to the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, by the Permanent Representative of the United States of America to the United Nations and Other International Organisations in Geneva. 60 “Annan backs UN Guantánamo demand”, BBC News Online, 17 February 2006, news.bbc.co.uk 61 “Pressure on Blair over Guantánamo”, BBC News Online, 17 February 2006, news.bbc.co.uk 62 “Pressure on Blair over Guantánamo”, BBC News Online, 17 February 2006, news.bbc.co.uk; see also HC Deb, 17 May 2006, col 993 63 Q 237 64 Q 235 30 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism in this country rather than the United States, it would have changed our politics and security parameters just as it has changed the Americans. It just would have done.65 In its response to our annual Report on Human Rights, the FCO went further than in previous exchanges with the Committee when it stated that the Government: has made clear publicly that it regards the circumstances under which detainees continue to be held in Guantanamo as unacceptable. The United States Government knows our views. As the Prime Minister said on 16 March 2006, it would be better if Guantanamo were closed. We will continue to raise our concerns about Guantanamo Bay and work with the US authorities to resolve outstanding issues.66 45. We note that in a speech to the Royal United Services Institute the Attorney-General described not just the circumstances but the very existence of the camp at Guantánamo as “unacceptable”, although he was careful to say that this was his personal opinion.67 He called for the camp to be closed down: Not only would it, in my personal opinion, be right to close Guantanamo as a matter of principle, I believe it would also help to remove what has become a symbol to many—right or wrong—of injustice. The historic tradition of the United States as a beacon of freedom, liberty and of justice deserves the removal of this symbol.68 On 15 June 2006, during a debate on the Committee’s Report on Human Rights, Minister for Trade and Human Rights Ian McCartney told the House: We have long made it clear that we regard the circumstances under which detainees continue to be held at Guantánamo Bay as unacceptable. The US Government know our views, which we have reiterated to them. As the Prime Minister has said, it would be better if Guantánamo were closed. We have also heard the public remarks of the Attorney-General and the Lord Chancellor. We raise those concerns in our regular discussions on detainee-related issues with the US Government. I give my hon. Friends the commitment that we will continue to do so.69 Pressed by the Chairman on whether Guantánamo Bay is unacceptable and should be closed, the Minister added: “Yes, that is what has been said. Furthermore, that is what I believe.” On 19 May 2006, the UN Committee against Torture added its voice to those calling for the closure of the camp. 46. We acknowledge that there is a problem of what to do with some of the detainees at Guantánamo and that those detained include some very dangerous terrorists. We also conclude that the continuing existence of Guantánamo diminishes US moral authority and adds to the list of grievances against the US. We further conclude that detentions 65 Q 236 66 Foreign & Commonwealth Office, First Report from the Foreign Affairs Committee; Session 2005–06; Annual Report on Human Rights 2005; Response of the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, Cm 6774, May 2006 67 For the full text of Lord Goldsmith’s speech, see: news.bbc.co.uk 68 Ibid 69 HC deb, 15 June 2006, cols 353-4 WH Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 31 without either national or international authority work against British as well as US interests and hinder the effective pursuit of the ‘war against terrorism’. We conclude that those who can be reasonably safely released should be released, those who can be prosecuted as criminals should be prosecuted and that as many others as possible should be returned to their countries of citizenship. We commend the British Government for its policy of urging the US government to move towards closing Guantánamo. Extraordinary rendition 47. Over the past year, there has been considerable speculation over whether, as part of its efforts in the ‘war against terrorism’, the USA is making use of the practice of extraordinary rendition.70 This is a procedure whereby criminal suspects are sent to other countries for interrogation that may involve the use of torture by the recipient state. Detainees have no access to lawyers and details of their detention may not be passed to the relevant consulates. The alleged destinations may include Egypt, Jordan, Morocco and Pakistan. Accusations have also emerged that the USA has sent or rendered terrorist suspects to a system of prisons (known to the CIA as “black sites”) across Eastern Europe, possibly in Poland and Romania, and also in Asia. Although there is firm evidence that flights have taken place, there is no firm evidence of the transfer of individuals or the application of torture. Much of the debate on this subject is based on journalism. 48. The US government has denied the use of torture as part of the process of rendition. In response to a letter written by the then Foreign Secretary on behalf of the United Kingdom as President of the EU, US Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice said on 5 December 2005: Rendition is a vital tool in combating trans-national terrorism. Its use is not unique to the United States, or to the current administration…[However] the United States does not permit, tolerate or condone torture under any circumstances. • The United States has respected—and will continue to respect—the sovereignty of other countries. • The United States does not transport, and has not transported, detainees from one country to another for the purpose of interrogation under torture. • The United States does not use the airspace or the airports of any country for the purpose of transporting a detainee to a country where he or she will be tortured. • The United States has not transported anyone, and will not transport anyone, to a country when we believe he will be tortured. Where appropriate, the United States seeks assurances that transferred people will not be tortured.71 49. These comments prompted discussion about differences between the interpretations of what constitutes torture in the USA and United Kingdom. We asked Jack Straw about this. He wrote to us, saying: 70 ‘Rendition’ is the practice of transferring detainees to other countries; ‘extraordinary rendition’ is the practice of transferring detainees to countries where torture may be used in interrogation. 71 Remarks by US Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice, 5 December 2005 32 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism First of all, it is important to note that the US Detainee Treatment Act, enacted on 30 December 2005, provides that no individual in the custody or under the physical control of the US Government, regardless of nationality or physical location, shall be subject to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment of punishment… On the question of definitions, the United Kingdom understands the term “torture” to have the meaning set out in Article 1 of the UN Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (CAT). Article 1 CAT defines torture as “any act by which severe pain or suffering whether physical or mental is intentionally inflicted...”. It does not, however, give specific examples of what constitutes torture. The understanding of the definition of torture made by the US on ratifying CAT specifies the meaning of “mental pain or suffering” in more detail than Article 1 CAT. The UK made no reservations or understandings on ratification and has not adopted a formal definition of what constitutes mental pain or suffering for the purposes of Article 1. Section 134 of the Criminal Justice Act 1988 provides that a public official commits torture if he intentionally inflicts severe pain or suffering on another in the performance of his duties, and does not define “severe pain or suffering”.72 50. The campaign group Reprieve has outlined allegations of British involvement in the rendition of Bisher al Rawi and Jamil El-Banna, who were detained in the Gambia and then sent to a prison in Kabul and Bagram airbase in Afghanistan for interrogation, before their transfer to Guantánamo Bay. Commenting on the case, Reprieve wrote: “There is developing evidence of (1) British governmental involvement in the men’s seizure and rendition, (2) British assurances that the men could safely go to the Gambia to set up a mobile peanut-processing plant, (3) telegrams that indicate direct British involvement in their seizure once they arrived, (4) the identity of the CIA plane that was used to render them, and (5) the failure to assist them despite the fact that they worked to help British intelligence.”73 In addition, Reprieve outlined the case of Binyam Mohammed Al-Habashi, who underwent torture and interrogation in Morocco after his detention in Pakistan; some information may have come from British intelligence sources.74 We asked the former Foreign Secretary about the al-Habashi case, but he refused to answer our questions, saying that he considered the issue a matter for the Intelligence and Security Committee.75 51. On 15 June 2006, during a debate on the Committee’s Report on Human Rights, Minister for Trade and Human Rights Ian McCartney commented on these cases: “In the cases of el-Banna and el-Rawi, we did not request the detention, and we played no role in their transfer to Afghanistan and Guantánamo. Benyam Mohammed Al Habashi was interviewed once by a member of the security services in Karachi in 2002, but the security services had no role in his capture or transfer from Pakistan.”76 72 Ev 145 73 Ev 151 74 Ev 156 75 Ev 145 76 HC Deb 15 June 2006, col 352WH Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 33 52. The Foreign Affairs Committee has a long-standing interest in the question of extraordinary rendition. The last Report in this inquiry concluded: “If the Government believes that extraordinary rendition is a valid tool in the war against terrorism, it should say so openly and transparently so that it may be held accountable.”77 Our recent Human Rights Report also discussed the issue. We noted that a range of investigations into extraordinary rendition and black sites had been launched across Europe, including one by the Council of Europe and at a judicial level in Germany, Italy and Spain. In June 2006, the Council of Europe’s Committee on Legal Affairs and Human Rights released a draft report. This claimed that 14 European states have colluded with the CIA in its pursuit of extraordinary rendition and that there is evidence to support suspicions that secret prisons are or were located in Poland and Romania.78 Washington rejected the report, saying that it contained nothing new and was full of allegations but “thin on facts”.79 53. The Government has denied any role in the process of extraordinary rendition, and said in its response to our last report on the Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism that its “policy is not to deport or extradite any person to another state where there are substantial grounds to believe that the person will be subject to torture…The British Government is not aware of the use of its territory or airspace for the purposes of ‘extraordinary rendition’.”80 The then Foreign Secretary told the Committee on 24 October 2005 that its position in respect of extraordinary rendition: has not changed. We are not aware of the use of our territory or air space for the purpose of extraordinary rendition. We have not received any requests or granted any permissions for use of UK territory or air space for such purposes. It is perfectly possible that there have been two hundred movements of United States aircraft in and out of the United Kingdom and I would have thought it was many more; but that is because we have a number of US air force bases here, which, under the Visiting Forces Act and other arrangements they are entitled to use under certain conditions.81 54. Jack Straw did undertake to conduct research to establish if the USA had made any requests for renditions through British airspace, and on 12 December 2005 issued a written answer stating that research by Government officials had failed to identify any occasion since 11 September 2001 when the USA had requested permission for a rendition from or through the United Kingdom.82 Both the British and US governments have categorically denied directly to the Committee that the USA has used British airspace or airports for the purposes of extraordinary rendition since 11 September 2001. 77 HC (2004–05) 36-I, para 98 78 Committee on Legal Affairs and Human Rights, Alleged secret detentions and unlawful inter-state transfers involving Council of Europe member states, Draft Report, 7 June 2006 79 “Secret CIA jail claims rejected”, BBC News Online, 7 June 2006, news.bbc.co.uk 80 Foreign & Commonwealth Office, Sixth Report of the Foreign Affairs Committee; Session 2004–05; Foreign Policy Aspects of the War Against Terrorism; Response of the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, Cm 6590, June 2005 81 Q 105 82 HC Deb, 12 December 2005, col 1643W 34 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 55. In March 2006 Alistair Darling, then Secretary of State for Transport and Adam Ingram, Minister of State (Armed Forces) at the Ministry of Defence admitted that six CIA planes linked to rendition had passed through the United Kingdom.83 We asked Jack Straw about this on 17 March 2006, and he told us: I have not got the answer in front of me from Adam Ingram, but it did not add a scintilla of evidence in support of the claim that there had been secret CIA flights coming through here with prisoners on them about whom we knew nothing. Not a scintilla…It does not follow for a second that because there are flights here with CIA aeroplanes that on those aeroplanes, in breach of undertakings given by successive American administrations, there were people being rendered through UK air space or territory without our agreement…if there had been people rendered in this way, I think it is a fair bet that somebody would have spotted this, somebody on the ground, or somebody would have told somebody. No one has come forward, nobody at all.84 Nevertheless, the Government adhered to its position in its response to our annual Report on Human Rights, stating that it has not approved any renditions, that it has made clear to the USA that renditions through British or Overseas Territory airspace require its permission, and that it is co-operating fully with the investigation by the Council of Europe.85 56. In December 2005 Jack Straw told us that allegations in the media of mistreatment of detainees in Greece by the British intelligence services were “in the realms of the fantastic.”86 When subsequent press reports appeared to cast more light on these allegations and threw doubt on the former Foreign Secretary’s comments, we wrote to him requesting fuller answers. His response stated: You have made a number of inaccurate assertions about “what did or did not happen in the presence of British officials in Greece” last year… I am not going to give details of operations nor of contacts with liaison services, all of which take place within authority provided by Parliament…You make a serious unqualified further allegation that, “not for the first time,” your Committee “has been told, at best, only part of the truth.” Since you have been categorical in this claim, please let me know the details of the occasions when I have told your Committee “at best only part of the truth. You also say that the Committee’s questions on extraordinary rendition over the last year “have not been taken seriously.” What justification do you have for saying this? It is completely untrue. I have, as I always do with your Committee’s and any other Parliamentary colleagues’ questions, gone to great lengths to deal with the matter very seriously.87 83 “Darling admits 73 visits by US rendition planes”, The Herald, 18 March 2006 84 Q 233 85 Foreign & Commonwealth Office, First Report from the Foreign Affairs Committee; Session 2005-06; Annual Report on Human Rights 2005; Response of the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, Cm 6774, May 2006 86 HC (2005–06) 574, para 49 87 HC (2005–06) 574, Ev 75 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 35 The Chairman of the Committee responded: You also ask me to justify the Committee’s view that its questions on rendition have not been taken seriously. There is nothing new in this. You will recall that in a Report at the end of the last Parliament, the Committee concluded that “the Government has failed to deal with questions about extraordinary rendition with the transparency and accountability required on so serious an issue” and called on it to “end its policy of obfuscation.” The comment was justified at the time and in the Committee’s view it remains justified. This view has been reinforced by the recent development which has seen the FCO providing quite full answers to opposition party spokesmen— fuller, certainly, that those it has provided to the Committee. Welcome though these fuller statements are, we fail to see why they could not have been made in response to the Committee’s questions. A particular case in point is the admission to William Hague in your letter of 6 February that an approach was made by the US authorities in connection with the rendition of a detainee in 2004.88 57. This exchange of letters underlines the unwillingness of the Government to engage with the Committee on this issue in a transparent manner. Although the then Foreign Secretary issued a statement on extraordinary rendition on 20 January 2006, this was in response to a leaked document that appeared to demonstrate the Government’s determination to limit debate on rendition, not the Committee’s inquiries. In that statement, Jack Straw said again that the United Kingdom had no knowledge of the transfer of people through British airspace for the purposes of extraordinary rendition, and that the FCO had completed a search for requests from the USA. 58. We conclude that there has been a lot of speculation about the possible use of rendition to countries where torture can take place, so called “Black Sites” and the complicity of the British Government, all of which would be very serious matters, but that there has been no hard evidence of the truth of any of these allegations. The British and US governments have categorically denied that either UK airspace, or airports have been used by the US government for rendition or extraordinary rendition since 11 September 2001. We reiterate our strong view that the Government must deal with extraordinary rendition in a transparent manner with timely answers to questions from this Committee. We conclude that it is regrettable that far more detailed information has been given in parliamentary answers to opposition party spokesmen than has been given in response to questions from this Committee. The International Rules-Based System 59. Previous Reports in this inquiry have considered in some detail international law in the context of the ‘war against terrorism’. Our predecessor Committee noted in July 2004 that concern about the spread of WMD is putting pressure on the existing framework of international law. “In particular, the limits to timely warning of an imminent WMD strike have raised doubts about the efficacy of classical interpretations of the doctrine of self- 88 HC (2005–06) 574, Ev 75–76 36 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism defence, and some states have proposed changing the existing legal framework in response.”89 60. The Committee set out the three bases for the use of force by states: The United Nations Charter outlaws the use of force with only two established exceptions: individual or collective self-defence in response to an armed attack (Article 51), and action authorised by the UN Security Council as a collective response to a threat to the peace, breach of the peace or act of aggression (Chapter VII). In addition, some have argued that there exists a right to use force to protect against a massive violation of fundamental human rights (humanitarian intervention).90 The Committee also set out comments by the Prime Minister in March 2004 that have been interpreted by some to suggest that he questions the adequacy of international law on the use of force and hinting at his support for a reappraisal of anticipatory self-defence and the existing order of international law.91 61. The Committee asked the Government about its position towards reform of international law in this area. It also looked forward with interest to the conclusions of the Panel of eminent Persons examining the case for reform in the UN and concluded that “a doctrine of humanitarian intervention appears to be emerging, but that its application in the context of the war against terrorism raises difficult questions of interpretation and embodies significant risk.” In its response to that Report, the Government told the Committee: “The Government supports the work of the Secretary-General’s High Level Panel on Threats, Challenges and Change. We hope that it will provide concrete recommendations for improving the UN’s response to the full range of threats to international peace and security.”92 In the area of humanitarian intervention, the Government told us: “there are occasions when it is right to intervene militarily in response to large-scale humanitarian crises. The Security Council has been increasingly willing to take this view in particular situations… There have been a number of attempts to establish international consensus on guidelines or criteria to be used in deciding when military action is justified… The Government hopes that the High Level Panel established by the Secretary-General will make recommendations in this area.” 62. When he appeared before us as a witness in April 2006, Professor Philippe Sands QC said this about the existing framework of international law: [C]oming back to the fundamental question: are the rules adequate to deal with the threats that we now face? My view is that they are adequate, that if the State finds itself in a situation in which a malign organisation, al Qaeda or some other entity, is 89 HC (2003–04) 441–I, para 400 90 Ibid, para 406 91 Ibid, paras 402–433 92 Foreign & Commonwealth Office, Seventh Report from the Foreign Affairs Committee; Session 2003–04; Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism; Response of the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, Cm 6340, September 2004 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 37 assembling weapons of mass destruction, it does not have to wait until the Security Council has authorised the use of force; if it is threatened by the actual use of force it is entitled to use force in self-defence. So those rules remain adequate to deal with a changed situation. So it is the positive side of the rather amorphous nature of international law rules that they are sufficiently ambiguous to evolve with time to take into account new situations. They are not set in stone.93 At the same time, Professor Sands cautioned against unilateral efforts to alter the international legal framework: “[I]n a complex globalising world we have an interest in a rules-based system setting forth minimum standards of behaviour. If you start unilaterally tinkering with the rules and getting rid of the ones that you do not like others will do the same thing in relation to the rules that they do not like.”94 63. On the question of humanitarian intervention, Professor Sands told us about the limited reforms endorsed by the UN General Summit in September 2005. These reforms did not go as far as the recommendations of the High Level Panel: [U]ltimately the changes which were adopted were regrettably very limited and I think insufficient to apply the changes that the Secretary General’s high level panel required, particularly, for example, in relation to the question of a state’s responsibility to protect. What do you do when a massive and fundamental violation of human rights is taking place in another country, do you stand by and do nothing at all? The high level panel came up with reasonably specific rules to try to move the UN rules along a little bit and State said, “No, we are not having that, we are basically satisfied with the rules as they are.”95 64. On the subject of humanitarian intervention, the UN Summit’s outcome document says: Each individual State has the responsibility to protect its populations from genocide, war crimes, ethnic cleansing and crimes against humanity. This responsibility entails the prevention of such crimes, including their incitement, through appropriate and necessary means. We accept that responsibility and will act in accordance with it. The international community should, as appropriate, encourage and help States to exercise this responsibility and support the United Nations in establishing an early warning capability. The international community, through the United Nations, also has the responsibility to use appropriate diplomatic, humanitarian and other peaceful means, in accordance with Chapters VI and VIII of the Charter, to help to protect populations from genocide, war crimes, ethnic cleansing and crimes against humanity. In this context, we are prepared to take collective action, in a timely and decisive manner, through the Security Council, in accordance with the Charter, including Chapter VII, on a case-by-case basis and in cooperation with relevant regional organizations as appropriate, should peaceful means be inadequate and 93 Q 310 94 Q 301 95 Q 309 38 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism national authorities are manifestly failing to protect their populations from genocide, war crimes, ethnic cleansing and crimes against humanity. We stress the need for the General Assembly to continue consideration of the responsibility to protect populations from genocide, war crimes, ethnic cleansing and crimes against humanity and its implications, bearing in mind the principles of the Charter and international law. We also intend to commit ourselves, as necessary and appropriate, to helping States build capacity to protect their populations from genocide, war crimes, ethnic cleansing and crimes against humanity and to assisting those which are under stress before crises and conflicts break out.96 65. Professor Sands wrote to us about this. Commenting on the various reform proposals, he told us that they “indicate a move towards a right to use military force to protect fundamental human rights. However, the conditions under which such force could be used, if at all, remain unclear, and a number of important states remain opposed to this development. In my view the recent conflict in Iraq has tended to undermine developments in this direction, since it has supported doubters who are concerned about motive and possible abuse.”97 66. We conclude that despite the reforms adopted by the 2005 UN General Summit, there remain uncertainties over the international legal framework for humanitarian intervention. We recommend that the Government set out in its response to this Report what steps it is taking to establish a consensus on whether and when intervention on humanitarian grounds is permissible. 96 “2005 World Summit Outcome”, General Assembly Sixtieth Session Agenda items 46 and 120, A/RES/60/1, 24 October 2005 97 Ev 100 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 3 39 Saudi Arabia Saudi Arabia and the ‘War against Terrorism’ Background 67. Saudi Arabia came under great scrutiny following the 11 September 2001 terrorist attacks. Fifteen of the nineteen suicide aeroplane hijackers were Saudi citizens. In the aftermath of the attacks, the country’s rulers, religious beliefs, social customs and education system came under examination as the Kingdom came to be widely portrayed as a breeding ground for terrorism. Members of the Committee visited Saudi Arabia in November 2005, and held meetings with government ministers, the ruling family as well as members of the business community and civil society. The terrorist threat in Saudi Arabia Enhanced threat 68. Since the mid-1990s, there have been periodic violent attacks against foreign and state interests in Saudi Arabia. However, the violence reached a new level in 2003. On 12 May 2003, attacks on Western housing compounds in Riyadh killed 35 people; and on 8 November 2003, 17 people, most of them expatriate workers from Arab countries, were killed in a suicide attack on a residential compound in Riyadh. The following months saw a series of deadly bombings and shoot-outs as militants attacked expatriate workers and the Saudi police. In June 2004, three gun attacks in Riyadh left two Americans and a BBC cameraman dead, and BBC Security Correspondent Frank Gardner seriously wounded. The same week, a US engineer was abducted and beheaded.98 More recently, in February 2006, the Saudi authorities announced that they had foiled a suicide attack on a major oilprocessing plant at Abqaiq—the first direct assault on Saudi oil production.99 Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula 69. The identity and affiliation of the militants is the subject of some speculation. The most active appear to be linked to the al Qaeda network. However, little is known about the organisational structure or membership of the ‘al Qaeda Organisation in the Arabian Peninsula’. For example, it is not known if it is a coherent organisation as opposed to a network of autonomous cells. There is also no reliable estimate of the number of individuals operating in Saudi Arabia; some analysts speculate that there are no more than 1,000–2,000, while others suggest much higher or lower figures.100 Frank Gardner told the Committee that al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula “is relatively small. They have very grand ideas. They have an online magazine, Al-Batar, where they have issued advice and 98 “Timeline: Saudi Arabia”, BBC News Online, 25 February 2006, news.bbc.co.uk 99 “Saudi most wanted killed in raid”, BBC News Online, 28 February 2006, news.bbc.co.uk 100 International Crisis Group, Can Saudi Arabia Reform Itself?, 14 July 2004 40 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism instructions to their followers on how to ambush princes and kidnap people. They are a small but extremely bloodthirsty organisation.”101 70. Describing the links between the international al Qaeda leadership and cells in Saudi Arabia, Frank Gardner told us: The nexus is weaker than it was. There was an intercept by Western intelligence collectively. I do not know whether it was the NSA or GCHQ, but there was an intercept in January 2003—this is public knowledge—of a communication from the hills of Waziristan in Pakistan, where some of al Qaeda’s fugitive leadership were hiding out and still are, and their followers in Saudi Arabia. That communication said: “It is time to start the insurgency.” The Saudi would-be insurgents said, “Hang on, we are not ready yet; we are not organised yet; we can get the weapons, but we are not ready.” They said: “No, this is an order; you have got to start.” Four months later they drove three suicide truck bombs into the compounds in Riyadh and killed 35 people, so it began.102 71. On 19 October 2005, Professor Paul Wilkinson, Professor of International Relations and Chair of the Centre for the Study of Terrorism and Political Violence at the University of St Andrews, told the Committee about al Qaeda’s goals in Saudi Arabia: “they would undoubtedly like to undermine the royal family and change the regime radically… Remember that al Qaeda’s leader is a dedicated enemy of the royal family. He was expelled by the royal family, and he feels bitter that the American forces were allowed to operate near the holy cities, which was one of the reasons he gave for starting al Qaeda in the first place.”103 Frank Gardner expanded on this: Originally, when Osama Bin Laden was setting up in Afghanistan, his big beef was with the presence of US uniformed forces in Saudi Arabia, in the Land of the Two Holy Mosques. He objected to the presence of 5,000 US Airforce men and women at Prince Sultan Air Base; and they were there from 1990 right the way through to late 2003. They have gone, so that particular aim is no longer there. There are those who support al Qaeda in Saudi Arabia, who consider that their entire peninsula needs to be cleansed of non-believers, of “Kuffar”, as they call them. I think that that was certainly the aim of the people who attacked us. Here was a chance to have a pop at some Westerners, scare others into leaving the country, and embarrass the Saudi Government. Ultimately they want to turn the Saudi Kingdom into something that is much more approaching a theocratic Islamist state. They do want to get rid of the alSauds. They have different reasons for this. In some cases, it is economic frustration; in some cases it is political frustration.104 72. Saudi Arabia’s large pool of unemployed youth and the prevalence of extremist religious beliefs create a natural constituency for militant groups. Professor Wilkinson referred to this problem when he told us that despite the improving response to terrorism 101 Q 143 102 Q 146 103 Q 18 104 Q 145 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 41 by the Saudi authorities, there remains the “problem of many potential supporters and sympathisers within their own society.”105 Although polls suggest popular respect for Osama bin Laden, they also indicate that the vast majority of Saudis would not support him or his organisation as political leaders. Anecdotal evidence suggests a general revulsion at acts of violence, especially when perpetrated against Saudis.106 According to some analysts, Saudis support the militants’ rhetoric, particularly their criticism of the USA and corrupt Arab regimes, but the violence in Saudi Arabia has aroused fear rather than admiration. Speaking about popular support for al Qaeda in Saudi Arabia, Frank Gardner told the Committee: “To a limited degree there is a kind of wellspring of anger, be it directed against the Americans because of what is going on in Iraq, or be it directed against the al-Saud in some cases. The numbers are hard to put a figure on.”107 However, he also made the point that the majority of the population is staunchly opposed to violence: “Generally, the Saudi population is very anti-terrorism, and the Saudi authorities have been able to reach out to them.”108 73. The threat of terrorism does not come only from Saudi citizens. There has been some surprise in Saudi Arabia over the presence in the country of jihadis from around the world: The Saudi authorities… were quite surprised and shocked to find that at a big shootout they had at a place called al-Ras in April [2005], … they found that they had killed in the shoot-out somebody called Abdul Karim Majati, who was a Moroccan. They did not even know he was in the country. He was instrumental in the Casablanca bombings of May 2003 in Morocco, and is thought to quite possibly have had a hand in the Madrid bombings, through connections to Moroccan extremists… it is making them wonder how many other international jihadis might have come back to Saudi Arabia and be hiding out there. 109 Iraqi ‘bleed-back’ 74. There is concern that the violence in Iraq is exacerbating the terrorist problem in neighbouring Saudi Arabia. The two countries have a long and porous border and it is feared that jihadis are crossing between the two countries. Frank Gardner told us: [T]here is a very ominous dark cloud on the horizon, and that is what the CIA refer to as “bleed-back”, the return of militants who have gone to fight in Iraq who have come back to Saudi Arabia; and there is an organisation for this, a pipeline to bring them back. The latest estimate I saw for the number of Saudi Mujahideen, as they call themselves, who have gone to fight the coalition and the Iraqi Government in Iraq, is about 350. I suspect that that is probably an underestimate and that the numbers are probably bigger than that. Obviously, some of these people do not come back. They think they are going to Paradise, and blow themselves up. However, there are those who are coming back, and there are indications that a recent shoot-out in Dammam 105 Q18 106 International Crisis Group, Can Saudi Arabia Reform Itself?, 14 July 2004 107 Q 143 108 Q 152 109 Q 148 42 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism in Eastern Province involved some Saudi militants who had come back from Iraq. Remember that these are people who are going to come back utterly brutalised, with all sense of humanity, as we would know it, dissipated. These are people who have watched beheadings first-hand, and possibly have even done them themselves.110 This problem was highlighted by the capture in March 2006 by the Iraqi authorities of a man suspected of involvement in an attempted suicide attack on an oil facility in Saudi Arabia. The suspect is reported to have been arrested on the desert border between Iraq and Saudi Arabia and is believed to have been heading to Mosul, in northern Iraq.111 75. We heard about this problem during our visit to Riyadh. The Saudi authorities are deeply concerned about bleed-back and would like to see better intelligence in Iraq as well as improved border control. We heard that around 900 people are believed to be operationally active in Iraq and ready to conduct operations in Saudi Arabia. Neil Partrick, Senior Analyst at the Economist Intelligence Unit, wrote to us about Saudi frustration over this: “Officials keenly wish that the Iraqi/coalition side of the border could be more effectively policed to prevent the very ‘wash-back’ that others have effectively encouraged.”112 76. We also heard from our Saudi interlocutors about the use that is made of the situation in Iraq for propaganda purposes. In particular, we heard concern over the use of recorded attacks in Iraq as a powerful recruitment tool. The Saudis seek to counter this propaganda by showing images of the impact of terrorism, for example by broadcasting and publishing images of the carnage caused by suicide attacks. 77. We conclude that there remains a serious terrorist threat in Saudi Arabia, and that this is directed at both the Saudi authorities and foreign interests. Counter-terrorism policy 78. There were initial concerns over the Saudi commitment to the international ‘war against terrorism’. Professor Wilkinson told us about this in June 2003: “I think that the Saudi situation is one where al Qaeda has been able to recruit and plant a cell structure and that the Saudi authorities appear to have underestimated this danger.”113 In November 2005, Frank Gardner reiterated this point to the Committee: “I do not think that the Saudi authorities had taken al Qaeda seriously… Prince Naif, the Interior Minister, had boasted and said: “We do not have any al Qaeda sleeper cells here; if we did, we would have woken them up long ago.” There was an element of “head in the sand”; al Qaeda was somebody else’s problem.”114 However, this all changed in 2003, when there were a number of devastating terrorist attacks in Saudi Arabia. 110 Q 144 111 “Iraq captures Saudi blast suspect”, BBC News Online, 3 March 2006, news.bbc.co.uk 112 Ev 187 113 Foreign Affairs Committee, Tenth Report of Session 2002–03, Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism, HC 405, Ev 104 114 Q 146 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 43 Security strategy and international cooperation 79. Since the attacks of 2003, Saudi Arabia has turned around its approach towards terrorism and is taking concerted efforts to tackle the problem. In a marked change in rhetoric, King Abdallah vowed to crush the “scourge” of al Qaeda in his first televised interview after becoming monarch. Speaking to US television, he admitted that there remains an extremist threat in Saudi Arabia.115 80. Professor Wilkinson told the Committee: “there is no doubt that the Saudi authorities, from a security measures point of view, have really sharpened their efforts against al Qaeda.”116 Speaking after the May 2003 attacks, Frank Gardner reported for Newsnight that the Saudi Authorities were now “on a mission to beat terrorism”. He also said that the May bombings had “galvanised” the Saudi authorities and that they were now giving full cooperation on the ‘war against terrorism’.117 Speaking to the Committee, Mr Gardner added that while there will undoubtedly be further terrorist attacks in Saudi Arabia, the country has taken very credible steps against terrorism. 118 81. Neil Partrick wrote to us about the Saudi counter-terrorism strategy and the importance of both short and long-term approaches. Neil Partrick told us that Saudi Arabia “continues to pursue a mixture of short term conventional security measures inside the kingdom against terror attacks, and some steps with an eye toward shifting the longer term social and economic conditions in order to tackle the causes of disaffection.”119 82. Describing the impact of Saudi policy on the ranks of al Qaeda in the Kingdom, Frank Gardner told us: They are heavily depleted; they have taken huge losses in the last couple of years, particularly in the last ten months. Their leadership is very fragmented. A lot of the main leaders have been killed in the last two years; for the record, men like Abdul Aziz al-Muqrin, Salah Al-Oufi, Yousef Al-Ayeeri and Turki Nasser Al-Dandani. All these men have been killed in the last two years, so a lot of the brains at the top of this organisation are no longer there. However, there are still recruits coming into it.120 Professor Paul Wilkinson reiterated this latter point, telling the Committee that while al Qaeda has suffered some severe setbacks with the capture and killing of individuals, this “does not mean that there are no candidates for replacing them—I am sure that they are being replaced—and there are plenty of potential recruits in Saudi Arabia.”121 83. Given the importance of Saudi production to world oil supplies, there has been concern over the danger of a terrorist attack on the country’s oil industry. Al Qaeda would certainly like to wreak havoc on the industry; Osama bin Laden has called for action against oil 115 “Saudi king vows to crush al-Qaeda”, BBC News Online, 14 October 2005, news.bbc.co.uk 116 Q 18 117 Newsnight, 31 July 2003 118 Q 143 119 Ev 187 120 Q 143 121 Q 18 [Professor Wilkinson] 44 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism installations in both Iraq and Saudi Arabia to “put an end to ‘the biggest theft in history’.”122 The Saudi authorities have taken particular care to ensure that the industry is protected. Professor Wilkinson told us that security measures for the energy industry are particularly impressive because the authorities recognise how damaging attacks on the energy industry would be to the economy.123 Frank Gardner reiterated this point: “I have been several times to the oil facilities and they are very well guarded. They would need a light aircraft or something like that, and even then they have got anti-aircraft defences. Last year, to get to Ras Tanura, which is the main loading terminal for Saudi’s oil exports to bring them out to the Gulf, I had to pass through six checkpoints, where we were checked very thoroughly. However, where there is a will, there is a way, and it is always possible.”124 Indeed, in February 2006, the Saudi authorities announced that they had foiled an attack on the country’s oil industry. A statement published on a website used by Islamic militants in Saudi Arabia said that the attack was part of al Qaeda’s campaign to force infidels out of the Arabian Peninsula.125 84. Saudi Arabia’s security and intelligence cooperation with the international community has improved significantly in recent years. During our visit to the region, we heard that since 2003, the United Kingdom and Saudi Arabia have developed a very substantial and mutually beneficial counter-terrorism relationship. Frank Gardner told the Committee about Saudi Arabia’s commitment to cooperating with the international community on terrorism: How reliable a partner is Saudi Arabia? At the moment it is reliable. The cooperation between Saudi Arabia, Britain and the US is intense in the CT field in Saudi Arabia. It has not always been that way, and remember that this is often quite difficult for the Saudis to manage because there will be people at middle and low level who cannot stand the Americans and who do not think that we are much better because we are, in their eyes, crusading, occupying forces, who have gone in to try and re-colonise Iraq. 126 85. In contrast, there is concern about the low level of regional cooperation. There are a number of areas that would benefit from enhanced regional collaboration, for example work to tackle weapons smuggling, the movement of terrorists and intelligence sharing. For example, Frank Gardner told the Committee that it is very easy for insurgents in Saudi Arabia to get hold of weapons from Yemen or Iraq.127 During our visit to the region, we heard more about this issue as well as Yemen’s role as a traditional route for smuggling arms in the region and concern over the failure to make full use of forensic material in Iraq. 86. King Abdallah has proposed the establishment of an international terrorism centre. However, given the strong reluctance of states to share intelligence multilaterally, this is unlikely to gain support; a regional terrorism centre might be more successful. During our 122 “Democratic façade”, The World Today, Mai Yamani, February 2005 123 Q 18 124 Q 155 125 “Al-Qaeda ‘behind Saudi oil plot’”, BBC News Online, 25 February 2006, news.bbc.co.uk 126 Q 143 127 ibid Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 45 visit we heard a suggestion that the Gulf Cooperation Council-funded Naif Centre could take the lead on a regional counter-terrorism centre, with the potential for a great deal of very good work in this area. 87. We conclude that Saudi Arabia is taking the threat of terrorism very seriously and is providing valuable assistance to the international community in this area. The Kingdom has put in place an effective security-focussed strategy targeting individuals and this has had a forceful impact on the al Qaeda presence in the Kingdom. However, we also conclude that the level of regional cooperation could be significantly improved, and recommend that the Government give assistance in this area, setting out in its response to this Report what steps it is taking. We further recommend that the Government pursue with its Saudi counterparts the possibility of a regional terrorism centre headed by Saudi Arabia. Financial measures 88. There are ongoing concerns over the channelling of terrorist funding through Saudi Arabia. Professor Wilkinson told the Committee about this: “We know that money is still flowing from wealthy donors in Saudi Arabia despite the Saudi effort to regulate their charities and so on… I think there is more to be done in suppressing the financial assistance that comes from wealthy Saudi supporters of al Qaeda.” 128 Frank Gardner expanded on the problem: Saudis are generally very generous people… The way it often works is that somebody will literally sign pretty much a blank cheque for what he thinks is a charitable cause —an orphanage in Bosnia, a madrassa in Pakistan, a blind charity somewhere—and the problem has been that in giving this charity Saudis have not been nearly strict enough with themselves in asking questions as to where it is going. A lot of the funds that people thought were going to genuine charitable causes were ending up in the hands of al Qaeda—in Afghanistan in the past.129 89. Neil Partrick wrote to us about Saudi efforts to tighten financial regulation: Saudi Arabia’s central bank (SAMA; the Saudi Arabian Monetary Agency) began to initiate legal changes before the FATF [Financial Action Task Force] visit, but, in the wake of the latter’s initial recommendations, went further. The monitoring of significant bank deposits and/or transfers is now far more comprehensive, while charitable giving, formerly a key means for transferring monies to armed groups, is much more closely circumscribed, with one notable organisation eventually being prevented from operating… SAMA is more efficient in following financial trails and in limiting the potential for monies to be transferred out of the country for nefarious purposes than a number of other GCC countries’ central banks.130 90. Nevertheless, there is scepticism over the effectiveness of tackling terrorist funding. Frank Gardner told us: 128 Q 18 129 Q 156 130 Ev 185 46 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism The trouble is that you cannot control it completely, and terrorism is cheap—9/11 cost half a million dollars; Madrid cost $50,000. This is nothing; it is peanuts; this is pocket money to some of the people who come to Bayswater in the summer. This is not a lot of money. Personally, I think that the financial war against terrorism is a bit of a red herring. 131 We discuss this issue in more detail in the chapter on the United Arab Emirates. Targeting the sources of terrorism 91. In addition to its security driven counter-terrorism strategy, Saudi Arabia has also formulated a longer-term approach targeting the causes of terrorism and the recruitment of terrorists. Frank Gardner told us about Saudi thinking behind this: [T]he man who is in charge of the counter-terrorism effort in Saudi Arabia is Prince Muhammed bin Naif, one of the sons of the Interior Minister. He is very highly rated by both Saudis and Western diplomats. He views it that physical measures are less than half the battle. They have got to win over the hearts and minds.132 We talked to the Saudi Interior Ministry about this approach. There is a firm recognition in Saudi Arabia that the military and security solution are only part of the answer. The Saudi government has done extensive research into the causes of terrorism, recruitment and training. 92. The Saudi government has sought to use religious authorities to tackle the ideology behind terrorism. Clerics have been encouraged to refute militants’ arguments, preaching against the religious rhetoric and explaining in mosques and on television that their acts are breaches of Islam. Religious scholars, some of them known for their conservative views, have issued strongly-worded statements, bolstered by references to the Quran and the traditions of the Prophet, clearly condemning al Qaeda’s actions and its attacks on Muslims and non-Muslims.133 Repentant militants have also appeared on television and Islamist mediators have been brought in. We were told all about these efforts during our visit to the region. 93. Frank Gardner told the Committee about this work: “One thing that the Yemenis have done, which the Saudis are also doing, is to use scholars, experts, people who know the Islamic scriptures inside out, to try and persuade deviants, as they put it—militants—to renounce violence and to turn their back on it and of course to betray some of the people in their organisation. This has had some success.”134 Neil Partrick also wrote to us about these policies and the importance of work “pressing the moral case, backed up by pressure on clerics directly and through more willingness to police their ranks and his success in 131 Q 157 132 Q 153 133 International Crisis Group, Can Saudi Arabia Reform Itself?, 14 July 2004 134 Q 159 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 47 securing fatwas in which mainstream ulema as well as former jihadis explicitly condemn terrorism.” 135 94. There have also been efforts to reform the education system. Until recently, Saudi religious text books suggested that a good way to show love for God was to treat infidels with contempt. Students learned that communism, secularism and capitalism were forms of apostasy. Such passages have now been purged, albeit with fierce resistance from some of the religious establishment.136 Frank Gardner told us about these efforts: [There are a number of projects underway in Saudi Arabia to try and take the sting out of jihadism to try and make people less suspicious and distrustful of Westerners. I have to say that the state itself has a lot to answer for here, having fostered and allowed an education system for decades that bred this hatred of non-believers, as they call it, particularly of Jews. I have been to every Arab country and have spent much of the last 25 years in the Arab and Islamic world, and it is really only in Saudi Arabia that I have encountered this xenophobia.137 95. Shortly after the Committee’s visit to Saudi Arabia, the Kingdom hosted a conference of the Organisation of the Islamic Conference (OIC) in the holy city of Mecca. This was a Saudi initiative to promote a more moderate vision of Islam. During the conference, King Abdallah criticised al Qaeda using “Islamically loaded terminology”.138 The conference’s final communiqué stated that “Islam is a religion of moderation which rejects bigotry, extremism and fanaticism.”139 96. Professor Robert Springborg, MBI Al Jaber Chair in Middle East Studies and Director of the London Middle East Institute at the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London, wrote to us about importance of isolating ‘trans-national jihadis’ from mainstream Islam: Because their views are essentially heretical and because their leadership is not well versed in Islam itself, trans-national jihadis are vulnerable to being isolated from and shunned by other Muslims. This is probably the single area in which facilitation of dialogue about the true nature of Islam and encouragement of Islamic liberals is a useful tool…. [T]rans-national jihadis, the primary target of the war against terrorism, do not enjoy widespread support and what support they do enjoy is in inverse proportion to their distance from any given Muslim population. These jihadis are vulnerable to being isolated from local Muslim populations and the war against terrorism should seek to do just that.140 This is clearly mainly a task for Muslim states, such as Saudi Arabia, rather than the international community. 135 Ev 189 136 “Keeping the faith”, Survey on Saudi Arabia, The Economist, 7 January 2006 137 Q 159 138 “Abdullah emerges as a reformist”, Afshin Molavi, Bitterlemons, volume 4, edition 2, 19 January 2006 139 “Saudi Arabia: reality check”, Le Monde Diplomatique, February 2006 140 Ev 181 48 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 97. During our visit we also heard about the Saudi approach to terrorist suspects and those who have been targeted by terrorist recruiters. While those who have committed crimes are dealt with by the legal system, the authorities seek to ‘convert’ those who have not yet committed crimes with the help of their families, clerics, mosques, schools and universities. If individuals are released, their families are made responsible for them. The approach appears to be having a good degree of success. Frank Gardner told us about this work. He made the point that the majority of the population is staunchly opposed to violence and that the authorities have tried to use this to put pressure on would-be jihadis: They have employed some quite controversial methods. They have talked to the families of militants, and in some cases pulled the families in for questioning, and said: “You put pressure on young Abdullah; bring him back in and talk to him.” You could see that as a subtle way of applying pressure or as essentially holding the family to ransom, in a way.141 98. The Saudi media is playing a significant role in supporting these counter-terrorism policies. Not only are the devastating and gruesome impact of terrorist attacks broadcast and published, but there is also a high-level of coverage of the issues. Neil Partrick also wrote to us about this: “The messages that are endlessly conveyed on TV adverts, debates, newspaper articles; and in large, often ghoulish, hoardings depicting the after-effects of terror outrages have played their part too in the culture of condemnation of what until recently had seemed to seriously threaten the stability of the country.”142 99. We conclude that Saudi Arabia is taking very seriously the causes of terrorism and process of extremist recruitment and has conducted valuable research in this area. We further conclude that Saudi Arabia is pursuing crucial long-term policies to tackle the causes of terrorism. We conclude that the United Kingdom could usefully learn from Saudi Arabia’s experience in this field, highlighting the two-way nature of cooperation with the Kingdom. Saudi Arabia and reform Background 100. Former Foreign Secretary Jack Straw explicitly linked efforts to counter international terrorism with the spread of democracy. In October 2005, he told us: “I believe that the only way we are going to get relative peace and security across the Middle East is through democracy… [W]e are seeing the beginnings of a movement for democracy which I believe is the only sure way of eliminating terror and alongside that the lack of progress in the Arab countries, which is another cause or contributor to the environment in which terrorism can breed, is through democracy.”143 The FCO’s strategy paper ‘Active Diplomacy for a Changing World’ also links the issues, stating that to make the world safer from global terrorism and weapons of mass destruction, it is important to address “the factors which encourage radicalisation and terrorist recruitment at home. These may 141 Q 152 142 Ev 189 143 Qq 62–63 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 49 include social and political alienation, poor governance, conflict and extremist propaganda.”144 Clearly, the linkage between the absence of democracy and terrorism is far from simple. Nevertheless, it is possible that the absence of political representation could feed into the causes of terrorism. Moreover, as Members of the British Parliament we wholeheartedly endorse the spread of democracy. Nevertheless, we admit that the process of democratisation is problematic, as evidenced by the recent election victory of Hamas, a group that continues to espouse the destruction of Israel, and that speedy moves towards reform could have dangerous destabilising effects in some societies. 101. Saudi Arabia is one of the least democratic states in the region. Political parties are banned, the opposition is organised from outside the country and political activists who publicly broach the subject of reform risk being jailed. The King and senior princes dominate the political system. High-ranking members of the royal family hold positions as the most prominent ministers and governors of the main cities and provinces. The Council of Ministers, which is appointed by and responsible to the King, advises on policy formulation and oversees the bureaucracy. 102. There are various well established methods of consultation. The appointed Consultative (Shura) Council advises the King and Council of Ministers. During our visit to Saudi Arabia we met members of the Consultative Council, including members of the its foreign affairs and security committees. We were greatly impressed by the calibre of the members and their work. As a recent Economist Survey on Saudi Arabia noted “It is easy to dismiss this all-appointed body as window-dressing, but even detractors admit that its legislative record is good, and its membership broadly representative of the kingdom’s diversity (with the huge proviso that it excludes women).”145 Nevertheless, the Council is unelected, has only limited powers to make recommendations on legislation and question ministers, and has no budgetary oversight. 103. There are also well-established traditions of access to senior officials, usually at a majlis, or public audience, and the right to petition. However, this tradition is marred by the exclusion of women, who for example are unable to participate in the weekly majlis, where senior members of the royal family listen to the complaints and proposals of Saudi citizens.146 Although this form of consultation is limited, and often focussed on dispensing largesse rather than influencing policy, it does offer an opportunity for exchange between the country’s rulers and their subjects. The King and senior princes are also careful to gain the support of important constituencies for their policies. This has been especially true of the counter-terrorism strategy. 104. Like many countries in the region, Saudi Arabia has come under international pressure to reform. Compared with many of its neighbours, Saudi Arabia has been slow to reform: 144 Foreign & Commonwealth Office, Active Diplomacy for a Changing World: The UK’s International Priorities, Cm 6762, March 2006 145 “All in the family”, Survey on Saudi Arabia, The Economist, 7 January 2006 146 Human Rights Watch, “Human Rights Watch Memorandum to the Government of Saudi Arabia on Human Rights Priorities in the Kingdom”, 7 February 2005, available at: www.hrw.org 50 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism • Oman has a bicameral legislature. Although its 58-seat upper chamber has only advisory powers and is appointed by the Emir, the 83-seat lower chamber is elected by universal suffrage of all Omani men and women over 21 except for members of the military and security forces. It has limited powers to propose legislation. The next elections are scheduled for 2007.147 • Qatar has a 35-seat appointed unicameral Consultative (Shura)Council. Although no legislative elections have been held since 1970, Qatar held two nationwide elections in 1999 and 2003 for a 29-member Central Municipal Council (CMC), which has consultative powers aimed at improving the provision of municipal services. Under the new constitution, which came into force on 9 June 2005, the public would elect by universal suffrage two-thirds (30 members ) of the 45 members of an enlarged Consultative Council and the Emir would appoint the remaining 15 members; preparations are underway for elections in early 2007. • Bahrain’s bicameral Parliament consists of a Shura Council of 40 members appointed by the Emir and a House of Deputies of 40 members directly elected to serve four-year terms by universal suffrage of men and women. The next election is to be held in September 2006. • Kuwait has a 50-seat unicameral National Assembly. Members are elected by popular vote to serve four-year terms. The electorate consists of adult males who are not in the military forces, and since 16 May 2005, adult females. All voters must have been citizens for 20 years. Elections were last held on 6 July 2003. The new Emir Sheik Sabah Al Ahmed Al Sabah dissolved Parliament on 19 May 2006 and called for elections to be held a year early. • Although the UAE does not have elected bodies, it is pursuing a serious programme of economic liberalisation. 105. US President George Bush’s call for democratisation in the Middle East could not have been more relevant to Saudi Arabia. Indeed, his key speech to the National Endowment for Democracy in November 2003 was largely seen as being directed at the Saudi government.148 However, there have also been domestic calls for change. In 2003 and 2004, reform issues entered the mainstream of debate and conversation, with petitions calling for an independent judiciary, economic reform, social reform and elections to the Consultative Council.149 Tentative reform measures 106. The government has responded to calls for reform with a number of political openings. These have included setting up of the National Dialogue and, most recently, holding of municipal elections. In November 2005, Dr Mai Yamani, Associate Fellow of the Middle East Programme at Chatham House, told the Committee about this moves: “In 147 CIA Yearbook, available at: www.cia.gov/cia/publications 148 In this, Bush said that “By giving the Saudi people a greater role in their own society, the Saudi government can demonstrate true leadership in the region.” 149 Arab Reform Bulletin, March 2005, volume 3, issue 2 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 51 Saudi Arabia they have made some limited, careful steps towards reform, but if you talk about competitive elections, freedom of expression, of assembly, of organisation, reforms of the educational system or the judiciary, they are more serious—and the policy of discrimination, on the basis of religious sect or tribe is still very much visible in the country.” 150 Neil Partrick also wrote to us about these reform steps, making the point that while they have been relatively modest by international standards, they have been “quite dramatic” by Saudi standards.151 National Dialogue 107. Starting in 2003, the National Dialogue is intended to ‘acknowledge’ the country’s diversity and pluralism. For the first time, Saudis from different religious sects and political orientations were brought together to talk about sensitive issues such as religious differences, education and the causes of Islamic extremism. Some of the discussions have been televised. During our visit to the region we met members of the secretariat of the National Dialogue. We heard about the series of meetings that have been organised and efforts to bring together disparate groups, some of which are considered heretical by the Saudi mainstream. We also heard about the impact that these meetings have had on influencing popular debate in the country. 108. Dr Yamani has criticised the National Dialogue as an “intellectual encounter” divorced from domestic reality: “Dialogue meetings resulted in discussions that have not been legitimised by the religious authorities, so nothing changed in the realities of everyday life. Shi’as still cannot practice their religious rituals, be a witness in court and even work as a butcher.”152 Nevertheless, Dr Yamani also noted that “such gatherings are unprecedented; government and other participants put their relationship to a real test, bringing together groups that have never talked before.”153 109. Neil Partrick wrote to us with a similarly mixed analysis of the National Dialogue. While the initiative has “proven to be largely a discussion forum on increasingly less pertinent issues”, it has also “provided a symbolic inclusiveness which, at its early stages, had seen an important expression of Shia ‘acceptability’ in the eyes of the regime, underscored by the sight of radical clerics associated in the early 1990s with a militant assertion of an essentially Sunni chauvinism sitting with representatives of the Shia minority… In essence, the National Dialogue has offered a more inclusive approach to the Shia and other minorities, raising the hope rather than providing the guarantee of fairer treatment for them as fellow Muslims.”154 Municipal elections 110. In 2005, elections for half the seats on Saudi Arabia’s 178 municipal councils were held for the first time; the government appointed the remainder of the council members. 150 Q 168 151 Ev 185 152 “Democratic façade”, The World Today, Dr Mai Yamani, February 2005 153 ibid 154 Ev 186 52 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism Popular engagement with the elections was mixed; less than half of eligible voters registered, but there was vigorous campaigning in some areas, especially in Riyadh and the Eastern Province.155 111. There was initial ambiguity over whether women would be able to participate in the elections: the wording of the regulations did not specifically exclude women, but it was subsequently announced that women would not be able to vote or stand for election. The reasons given for this were logistical: an insufficient number of women to run women-only registration centres and polling stations, and a shortfall in the number of women holding the photo identity cards required to vote.156 Women have since been promised that they will be able to vote in the 2009 municipal elections. 112. While a groundbreaking step in Saudi Arabia, the municipal elections have prompted a fair degree of cynicism. Writing in the World Today, Dr Yamani criticised the process: “In accordance with Saudi tradition a prince has been appointed chairman of the general committee overseeing polling. The message here is not one of wider political participation, but rather of continued dominance by the ruling family.”157 She reiterated this point to the Committee in November 2005: “They have had partial municipal elections that we saw in February to April, which were not inclusive. About one-quarter of the male population participated. Half the members were appointed, and the whole female population was excluded.” 158 The delay in setting up the councils only fuelled such criticism; it took eight months to publish the regulations governing Council proceedings and the councils were not formed until December 2005.159 113. Nevertheless, other analysts have emphasised the importance of the elections as an initial step in the democratisation process. Writing about popular perceptions of the elections, Saudi journalist Rasheed Abou-Alsamh said: Many Saudis remain deeply cynical about the powers of the partially elected councils, but this baby step towards democracy has nonetheless given hope to some that they will see elections for the Shura Council, which is currently being expanded from 120 to 150 members, during their lifetimes. They also believe that the municipal elections have opened the door to further reforms, and say it is a door the government will not be able to close again easily.160 Continued repression 114. Despite these tentative reform steps and what appears to be a general acknowledgement of the need for reform by the Saudi authorities, reformers continue to be subjected to harassment. This has ranged from official impatience and pressure to refrain 155 Arab Reform Bulletin, February 2005, volume 3 issue 1; and “Saudi Arabia: reality check”, Le Monde Diplomatique, February 2006 156 Arab Reform Bulletin, October 2004, volume 2 issue 9 157 “Democratic façade”’, The World Today, Dr Mai Yamani, February 2005 158 Q 167 159 “Saudi councils finally announced”, BBC News Online, 15 December 2005, news.bbc.co.uk; and “Saudi Arabia: reality check”, Le Monde Diplomatique, February 2006 160 Arab Reform Bulletin, March 2005, volume 3, issue 2 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 53 from publicising reform demands and the forced cancellation of meetings to stormy reprimands by ministers, arrests and prison sentences. 115. According to Human Rights Watch, the Saudi security forces have violently dispersed gatherings such as the October 2003 demonstrations in Riyadh and other cities, and arrested individuals attempting to protest peacefully. On 12 January 2005, a court in Jeddah affirmed the unofficial ban on public demonstrations by sentencing 15 individuals to prison sentences and lashes for participating in a demonstration in October 2004.161 116. In May 2005, a court in Riyadh sentenced three reformers to lengthy prison sentences for circulating a petition that called for the establishment of a constitutional monarchy. The charges against the men are reported to have included incitement to unrest, attempting to disturb the peace, rebelling against the ruler, speaking to foreign media and incitement against the Wahhabi school of Islam. The trials were conducted in camera and the defendants’ lawyers have faced imprisonment and harassment.162 In August 2005, King Abdallah pardoned the three men along with their lawyer, who was awaiting trial. Reform prognosis 117. These mixed signals have prompted varying interpretations of the long-term prospects for reform. A number of members of the royal family have made comments suggesting that they support substantive reform. In 2003, then Crown Prince Abdallah was the first high-ranking official to adopt the expression “expanding political participation”. He said that municipal elections would “be the beginning of the Saudi citizens’ participation in the political system.” For his part, foreign Minister Prince Saud Al-Faisal has said that Saudi Arabia “has reached a stage in our development that requires expanding political participation.”163 Speaking to the Committee in October 2005, an FCO witness said: “the government there does appear to be committed to what I think is fair to describe as an evolutionary approach to further democratisation in that country.”164 118. Some believe that growing domestic and international pressure compelled the royal family implement reforms, but that it has not made a strategic decision to transform the political system. Dr Yamani told the Committee that the limited reform moves were aimed at mollifying international demands for democratic reform: “[W]hen Abdullah, Crown Prince at the time, now King Abdullah, arrived in May to visit President Bush, he said: “You see, we have had the elections. We had the Islamists, but we are controlling and managing the situation. That was very good for the whole talk about reform and democracy in the Middle East. “165 119. Others attribute the mixed signals to divisions within ruling circles over the desirability and speed of change. The smooth succession of King Abdallah in August 2005 after the death of his half-brother, King Fahd, prompted speculation that the pace of 161 Human Rights Watch, “Human Rights Watch Memorandum to the Government of Saudi Arabia on Human Rights Priorities in the Kingdom”, 7 February 2005, available at: www.hrw.org 162 Human Rights Watch, “Saudi Arabia: Political Reformers Sentenced”, 16 May 2005, available at: www.hrw.org 163 Arab Reform Bulletin, March 2004, volume 2, issue 3 164 Q 127 165 Q 168 54 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism reform would accelerate. King Abdallah is widely considered to be a reformer and many believe that his succession will give him more authority to push ahead with reform.166 However, given the tradition of decision-making by consensus in the royal family, there are likely to remain royal brakes on reform. 120. During our visit to Saudi Arabia, we heard optimism that there may be further reform steps in the near future. These include a possible expansion of the powers of the Consultative Council and reform of the judiciary. We were also assured that the reform process is irreversible. However, we were also warned about the risks of reform and were told that the nature and pace of reform must be appropriate to Saudi circumstances. We were told about fears that change could jeopardise social and political cohesion. We heard many times that western-style elections are not a ‘miracle solution’. We also heard about the strong conservatism of the Saudi population and its resistance to reform and the danger of democratisation in the absence of the crucial underpinnings of democracy. The point was made that Saudi Arabia has advanced tremendously in the last 20 years and that the process is continuing; the country needs to advance gradually and in stages. Much of the Saudi population remains attached to very conservative religious values, which makes reform in areas such as women’s rights and education especially sensitive. From the discussions we had in Saudi Arabia, this factor, more than any other, emerged as the main impediment to reform. 121. Disquiet over the potential consequences of a hurried political opening is not limited to officials, and has also been expressed by members of the business community and reformers. As one journalist put it: “It would be like putting the carriage in front of the horse. There has to be some kind of political opening up, but our society still thinks along tribal and religious lines. Its political consciousness has not developed to the point where it would elect the most efficient… The culture of democracy accepts the pluralism of opinions and relativity in all things. How can you reconcile relativity with a society that is governed by religion?”167 122. There is some difference of opinion over the obstacle posed to reform by the religious establishment. It is certainly true that the legitimacy of the ruling family rests to a very large extent on its religious credentials. The International Crisis Group has argued that in the context of the ‘war against terrorism’ and the domestic fight against violent Islam “no Saudi ruler can contemplate a significant policy shift without taking into account the likely reaction of the country's religious establishments.”168 However, other analysts emphasise the ‘give and take’ between the ruling family and the Ulema. Nevertheless, Government efforts to reform the education system have faced serious opposition from the clerics, who have warned against any dilution of the curriculum’s Islamic content, accusing the regime of bowing to US pressure. 123. In addition to fears over the risks associated with speedy reform, there are dangers in reforming too slowly, especially in the context of socio-economic disparities and popular grievances. There is concern that the slow pace of reform could be creating a fertile 166 “Obituary: King Fahd—A forceful but flawed ruler”, Financial Times, 1 August 2005 167 Interview conducted by the International Crisis Group, cited in Can Saudi Arabia Reform Itself?, International Crisis Group, 14 July 2004 168 International Crisis Group, Can Saudi Arabia Reform Itself?, 14 July 2004 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 55 recruiting ground for groups such as al Qaeda. There is anger among some parts of the population over the growing gap between rich and poor as well as over the relationship between the government and the West. 124. Insufficient job creation, an ill-adapted education system and anachronistic economic structures, particularly when coupled with the sight of thousands of Princes enjoying lavish lifestyles, risk popular discontent. Calls for social justice, an end to corruption and wider access to the country’s huge natural wealth have long been central to calls for reform. Saudis increasingly point out that the frustration of their youth and resentment of social injustice are fuelling support for violent Islamic militancy.169 Neil Partrick wrote to us about the problem of unemployment: Despite the cyclical patronage power of oil revenue windfalls, radical clerics have been able to exploit a relative economic downturn that has seen per capita GDP, although rising again in recent years, remain far below that enjoyed from the late 1970s to early 1980s. With officially admitted unemployment running at 10% among a 26m population rising in excess of 3% a year, and the state unable to provide meaningful jobs for its burgeoning numbers of annual school or college leavers, then economic pressures are likely to continue to cause political frustrations. In this context radicals are easily able to point to corruption and the effective political complicity of the al-Saud leadership in US and UK policies which, at the popular as well as elite level, are judged to be unconscionable, whether in Iraq or Palestine.170 Educational reform is a critical aspect of tackling the employment situation. 125. Dr Yamani is critical of the failure of the international community to put pressure on Saudi Arabia to pursue meaningful reform.171 However, there is concern that pressure in this area could be counterproductive. Nevertheless, international engagement may have an indirect effect on the pace of reform. In December 2005, Saudi Arabia joined the WTO after 12 years of talks and this could accelerate the pace of reform. The country will need to adopt the entire body of WTO legislation, a process that involves liberalisation of currently restricted sectors. Saudi Arabia will have to open its protected economy to the outside world, including fellow WTO member Israel. The accession should enhance the business environment in Saudi Arabia by improving transparency and predictability.172 126. There is also a role for the international community in supporting reform efforts. Dr Peter Gooderham, Director Middle East and North Africa at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, told the Committee about the Government’s efforts in this area: “the fund that we have available in the FCO, the Engagement with the Islamic World Fund, and the £10 million that the Foreign Secretary referred to—we are using a lot of that money for precisely projects designed to bolster rule of law, the participation of women in the political and democratic processes in various countries in the region; so we are doing what we can.”173 However, Dr Gooderham also cautioned against political interference: 169 International Crisis Group, Can Saudi Arabia Reform Itself?, 14 July 2004 170 Ev 189 171 Q 183 172 “Saudi WTO membership approved”, BBC News Online, 11 November 2005, news.bbc.co.uk 173 Q 128 [Dr Gooderham] 56 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism “Obviously, we have been doing what we can to encourage the process of democratisation. We are not alone; there is a G8 process that is active; but we are very careful to put that in the context of encouragement rather than trying to impose or direct, because that would clearly be counterproductive.”174 127. The Government has supported a number of projects in Saudi Arabia using the Global Opportunities Fund. These have included training journalists on election reporting, promoting the participation of women in civil society and promoting economic reform and liberalisation. The British Council has also been active in supporting the reform process, for example by running women’s self-development and leadership workshops. 128. We conclude that despite a number of reform steps, the political environment remains severely constrained in Saudi Arabia. This raises serious concerns, and in the context of glaring socio-economic disparities, could feed into extremism and the causes of terrorism. Nevertheless, we conclude that the Saudi reform process must be domestically driven; perceived interference by the international community could be counter productive. Human rights 129. There are numerous human rights concerns in Saudi Arabia. The FCO’s Annual Report on human rights has an extensive section on Saudi Arabia. This says: “There has been a small but significant improvement in the situation in Saudi Arabia since our last Annual Report. However, the Saudi government has continued to violate human rights, including by restricting freedoms of expression and press, assembly, association, religion and movement. The government also continues to discriminate against women, foreigners, non-Muslims and non-Sunnis Muslims and to impose strict limitations on workers’ rights.”175 In particular, the Report refers to: • the introduction of a new code for criminal procedure, although torture of detainees is still routine; • discrimination against non-Muslims and restriction of women’s rights; and • the slow process of reform. 130. In our latest Human Rights report, published in February 2006, we said: Human Rights Watch have raised concerns that the Government “may be contemplating a possible Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with the Saudis, regarding commitments not to torture those who might be deported to Saudi Arabia, along the lines of MOUs which have already been agreed with Jordan and Libya.” Additionally, Kate Allen of Amnesty International told the Committee: “We would recognise that there have been small steps. We are not sure whether those are significant or not. The human rights situation in Saudi Arabia is still absolutely dire in very many ways that we have documented, including appalling use of the death 174 Q 129 [Dr Gooderham] 175 Foreign & Commonwealth Office, Human Rights Annual Report 2005, Cm 6606, July 2005, p 78 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 57 penalty and the use of torture.” The use of the death penalty for a broad range of crimes such as apostasy, drug offences, witchcraft, adultery and murder, as well as broad crimes such as ‘acts of sabotage and corruption on earth’, raises particular concerns.176 We also noted concerns about the treatment of British and Commonwealth nationals, including Dr William Sampson, who confessed to a bombing while in Saudi police custody.177 131. In its response to that Report, the Government told us that it continues to raise its concerns about human rights with the Saudi authorities at all levels, and noted the enhanced bilateral cooperation through the Two Kingdoms Dialogue (we discuss this positive initiative later in this chapter).178 It also outlined some of the positive steps that have occurred, for example with regard to women’s rights. 132. We pursued these issues during our visit to Saudi Arabia. We were particularly struck by the complete segregation of society, with Saudi women excluded from meetings. This was particularly evident at one meeting, when our female interlocutors observed us via a video link and were unable to participate themselves. In February 2006, Human Rights Watch outlined its concerns about the position of women: Women in the kingdom continue to suffer from severe discrimination in the workplaces, homes, and courts, and from restrictions on their freedom of movement. Women do not have the right to leave the house without a male relative or written permission from their guardian, which is also required to enrol in school or university, seek medical help, or open a bank account. There are reports that some government institutions have refused to accept women’s new identity cards, insisting on seeing a woman’s family card as well. A recent study of the Saudi-American Bank found that “compensation of Saudi males is on average two times that of Saudi females with the same level of education.” The government has so far also failed to act on a recommendation from the government-appointed National Dialogue calling for the appointment of women judges to family courts.179 133. During our visit we heard about a number of positive steps on women’s rights. These include changes in the labour law to allow women to work in more fields and measures to improve the training and education available to women. For the first time, women have been allowed to stand for election to the Jeddah Chamber of Commerce; despite a reportedly hostile campaign by several imams, two women were elected (out of 12 representatives) and a further two women were appointed to sit on the board (out of six appointed members).180 We were also assured that there will be further steps to improve 176 HC (2005–06) 574, paras 167–168 177 Ibid, para 166. See also para 140, below. 178 Foreign & Commonwealth Office, First Report from the Foreign Affairs Committee; Session 2005–06; Annual Report on Human Rights 2005; Response of the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, Cm 6774, May 2006 179 Human Rights Watch, “Human Rights Watch Memorandum to the Government of Saudi Arabia on Human Rights Priorities in the Kingdom”, 7 February 2005, available at: www.hrw.org 180 “Saudi Arabia: reality check”, Le Monde Diplomatique, February 2006 58 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism the situation of women. Nevertheless, women’s rights in Saudi Arabia remain seriously constrained. As Dr Yamani told the Committee: [I]t is the only country in the world where women are not legally allowed to drive cars or travel between one city and another without permission of their guardian. Obviously, it is the only country where women are not allowed to vote… Unemployment for women remains at 95 per cent. There is some progress though; King Abdullah is planning to have more jobs created for women, but it is very gender segregated and still has to comply to the definition by the Wahhabi clerics of the nature of women. 181 134. During our visit, we were also deeply concerned by what we heard about the rights of foreign workers. We got the impression that this issue is not taken as seriously as it should be by the Saudi authorities. In its memorandum, Human Rights Watch outlined the situation: Migrant workers continue to suffer from discrimination in practice and in law. Long working hours and round-the-clock confinement put domestic workers at a heightened risk of abuse. Non-payment of wages for several months and confiscation of passports and residency permits, in contravention of the law, are common violations. The public school system remains closed to the dependents of migrant workers. Poor migrant workers have little if any access to the justice system, given their lack of resources, literacy, and Arabic language capabilities. One-half of those judicially executed so far in 2005 have been migrant workers, although they constitute less one third of the population.182 135. We conclude that the human rights situation in Saudi Arabia continues to give cause for grave concern. We recommend that the Government continue to make clear that discrimination against women, other human rights abuses which are endemic in Saudi Arabia including discrimination against migrant workers, torture and the shortcomings of the judicial system, breed discontent and fall far short of universal standards. We recommend that the Government set out in its response to this Report what progress was made in this area at the April 2006 meeting of the Two Kingdoms Forum. We further recommend that the Government set out whether it is seeking a memorandum of understanding with Saudi Arabia. Bilateral relations 136. The bilateral relationship with Saudi Arabia is clearly immensely important to both countries. Saudi Arabia meets nearly all the government’s strategic priorities. As Neil Partrick told us: “Saudi Arabia is a pivotal player in the security and stability of the Arabian peninsula”.183 In recent years, there have been a number of high level visits between the countries, with the Prime Minister visiting Saudi Arabia several times in the last year and Jack Straw visiting in the first half of 2006. The United Kingdom and Saudi Arabia have 181 Q 185 182 Human Rights Watch, “Human Rights Watch Memorandum to the Government of Saudi Arabia on Human Rights Priorities in the Kingdom”,7 February 2005, available at: www.hrw.org 183 Ev 184 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 59 particularly strong defence and commercial ties, with growing opportunities as a result of the high oil price. 137. A bilateral forum has been set up to facilitate dialogue. The first meeting of the ‘Two Kingdoms’ forum was held in February 2005 and was joint hosted by the former Foreign Secretary and Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud. The meeting discussed reform issues, in particular economic reform, youth and women. The second meeting was convened in April 2006. Jack Straw told us about the importance of this forum: “There was the joint conference on Saudi reform, which I chaired with His Royal Highness Prince Saud AlFaisal in February. If you had said to me even a year ago that there was going to be this kind of joint conference, one would have been very sceptical; but it indicates an increasing commitment by the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia to its reform programme.”184 138. Neil Partrick wrote to us about the need for the United Kingdom to take a critical stance towards Saudi Arabia: “It also requires greater UK government frankness about the political and administrative changes needed in the kingdom to enhance accountable and transparent decision-making; a direction that, if anything, appears to be being setback of late.”185 However, others emphasise the limits to the influence that the international community can have on Saudi Arabia, especially on domestic policy, and the importance of quiet and private diplomacy. 139. We conclude that the United Kingdom’s relationship with Saudi Arabia is of critical and strategic importance. Not only is the Kingdom a crucial ally in the international ‘war against terrorism’, but it is central to many of this country’s national interests and meets most of the Government’s strategic priorities. We further conclude that while the United Kingdom may not see eye to eye with Saudi Arabia on a number of issues, it is critically important that the two countries remain close and communicative allies. We conclude that Saudi Arabia is a country where a significant British diplomatic presence can make a difference. The stability of Saudi Arabia is vital to the United Kingdom’s interests, particularly in the context of the war in Iraq and developments in Iran. We conclude that stability requires significant reform. 140. At the time of concluding the drafting of our Report, the United Kingdom’s courts had just determined that the Saudi Arabian government is immune, in international law, from being pursued in UK courts in relation to the unjustified detention and alleged torture of British citizens. We recommend that the British Government disclose what it knows about this grave incident and what representations it made on behalf of the British nationals. 184 Q 131 185 Ev 189 60 4 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism The United Arab Emirates The United Arab Emirates and the ‘war against terrorism’ Background Links with the Taliban and al Qaeda 141. The UAE was one of only three countries to recognise the Taliban as the legitimate government of Afghanistan (Pakistan and Saudi Arabia were the other two). During Taliban rule, the UAE continued to allow Ariana Afghan airlines to operate services to the UAE. It has been argued that this resulted in “the growth of an organic link between groups in Afghanistan on the one hand and Saudi Arabia and the UAE on the other, as contact, travel and financial flows between them did not encounter the problems faced elsewhere.”186 Many US officials believe that al Qaeda activists might have spent time in the UAE.187 Notably, two of the highjackers in the 11 September 2001 attacks were UAE nationals. Financial links with terrorism 142. The UAE had a long-standing reputation as a haven for smuggling and money laundering. Even before 2001, al Qaeda was known to have financial links with the UAE. In 1999, a US delegation travelled to the UAE with evidence that Washington claimed proved that Osama bin Laden was channelling funds through the Dubai Islamic Bank.188 However, early international pressure on the UAE to clean up money laundering and smuggling met with little success.189 143. Frank Gardner told the Committee about the situation in the UAE: Dubai particularly is an international conduit for both good and bad things. It was long a centre for smuggling gold into India. It has often been used as a place for money-laundering, particularly by Russians who were coming out of the CIS states with just wads of cash, and buying up electronics and going back. Nobody ever asked where the money came from. I used to live in Bahrain as well, and Bahrain had a very tight financial system because they had close links with the Bank of England, so the monetary agency worked very closely and was very strict on money-laundering. Dubai did not have those tight, stricter controls. When I used to be a banker, we were always rather wary of doing business in Dubai because we could not be sure of where the money came from. It is very much a home of Hawala transactions, which are paperless, record-less transactions, all done over the phone…There are no auditable records of this; it is all done on trust. It is done very much on trust. It is an ancient 186 Gerd Nonnemann, Anoushiravan Ehteshami, Iris Glosemeyer, Terrorism, Gulf Security and Palestine: Key issues for an EU–GCC dialogue, Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies, January 2002 187 “The United Arab Emirates (UAE): Issues for U.S. Policy”, Congressional Research Service Report for Congress, 9 May 2005 188 “Trail links Bin Laden aide to hijackers”, The Guardian, 1 October 2001; and “US traces bin Laden funds to UAE bank”, The Times, 9 July 1999 189 “Hijackers linked to Saudi Arabia and Emirates”, The Guardian, 14 September 2001 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 61 system and it allows people to evade strict financial controls. There has been a lot of concern that this has helped terrorists to get funding.190 144. Much of the financing for the 11 September attacks is known to have passed through the UAE via the unregulated Hawala money-transfer system. However, the formal banking sector is also believed to have been involved. Frank Gardner told the Committee: “It is known for a fact that some of the funding for the 9/11 attacks did pass through a bank in Dubai, not through the Hawallah system, but through an actual bank.”191 Proliferation 145. The UAE has also been involved in proliferation networks. According to a press report in 2005, an MI5 document entitled ‘Companies and Organisations of Proliferation Concern’ lists the UAE as “the most important” of the countries where front companies may have been used. The list was compiled in an attempt to prevent British companies from inadvertently exporting sensitive goods or expertise to organisations covertly involved in WMD programmes.192 146. This is not the first time that there have been concerns over businesses based in the UAE. In 2001, the United Kingdom told the UAE to shut down the air freight businesses of a Russian accused of trafficking weapons to rebel movements in Africa including in Angola, the Democratic Republic of Congo and Sierra Leone.193 147. AQ Khan’s proliferation network has also been linked with the UAE: “In connection with recent revelations of illicit sales of nuclear technology to Iran, Libya, and North Korea by Pakistan’s nuclear scientist AQ Khan, Dubai was named as a key transfer point for shipments of nuclear components sold by Khan. Two Dubai-based companies were apparently involved in trans-shipping such components: SMB Computers and Gulf Technical Industries.”194 The UAE was the main transhipment point for much of the equipment bound for Libya.195 Terrorist target? 148. The UAE, and especially Dubai, have been seen as prime targets for al Qaeda given the number of highly visible western companies and individuals there. Al Qaeda and affiliated groups have threatened the country. A letter dated 26 May 2002 warned the UAE that continued cooperation with the USA would “bring the country into an arena of conflict, in which it will not be able to endure or escape from its consequences”. The letter noted the UAE’s economic dependence on “impudent tourism”. Another warning listed the 190 Q 164 191 ibid 192 “MI5 unmasks covert arms programmes”, The Guardian, 8 October 2005 193 “International Economy: Britain tells UAE to close arms dealer’s freight business”, Financial Times, 24 January 2001 194 “The United Arab Emirates (UAE): Issues for U.S. Policy”, Congressional Research Service Report for Congress, 9 May 2005; and “Nukes ‘R’ US”, The New York Times, 4 March 2004 195 “Unravelling the A. Q. Khan and Future Proliferation Networks”, The Washington Quarterly, Spring 2005 62 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism government’s work with the UN and in training and equipping the Iraqi police force as leaving “no room for doubt that the punishment of God will befall your country”.196 149. However, when he appeared as a witness to the Committee, Frank Gardner downplayed this threat: It has surprised a lot of people that Dubai has not yet been hit by a terrorist attack, but Dubai is a huge melting pot. If al Qaeda hit Dubai, it would be an own goal… I am quite certain that al Qaeda has supporters, possibly even operatives there, but there have been no signs so far that they have chosen to make any big attacks. It would be disastrous for everybody but also for the Makhtoums.197 Other analysts have speculated that the UAE has been spared attacks due to its usefulness for al Qaeda as a communications and financial hub.198 However, some others believe that the UAE has not been attacked so far because of the extremely tight security in the country, and that it is inevitable that there will be terrorist attacks in the UAE at some time. Counter-Terrorism Policy 150. The attack on the twin towers led to a dramatic change in the approach of the UAE authorities. The UAE strongly condemned the September 2001 terrorist attacks and broke off relations with the Taliban. It has since cooperated with the international community in tackling international terrorism. During our visit to the region we were reassured that the UAE is totally ‘onside’ when it comes to cooperation in counter terrorism. While the level of this cooperation is difficult to gauge in some fields, it is known that the UAE has extradited a number of high-profile jihadi figures. The UAE acknowledged assisting in the 2002 arrest of at least one senior al Qaeda operative in the Gulf (Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri). The country also arrested Qari Saifullah Akhtar, a senior al Qaeda operative who trained militants for combat in Afghanistan and is believed to have been involved in two attempts to assassinate Pakistani President General Pervez Musharraf; Akhtar was subsequently turned over to Pakistan.199 151. Although the UAE has so far escaped attack, its government knows that it is a potential target and has taken stringent precautions. Even a failed attack could be disastrous for Dubai’s booming tourist industry. In its fight against terrorism, the UAE is aided by the fact that it is a small country with no large cities in which terrorists can disappear. Moreover, it benefits from a high level of wealth which goes some way to mitigate against domestic discontent. 152. During its visit to the region, the Committee heard about bilateral cooperation on aviation security. Secondees from the Department of Transport are working to monitor airport security and are providing invaluable assistance on practical aviation security. This 196 “Declassified Document Outlines History of al-Qaeda Threat to the UAE”, Terrorism Focus, The Jamestown Foundation, 21 March 2006, volume III, issue 11 197 Q 164 198 “Declassified Document Outlines History of al-Qaeda Threat to the UAE”, Terrorism Focus, The Jamestown Foundation, 21 March 2006, volume III, issue 11 199 “Terror suspect sent to Pakistan”, BBC News Online, 8 August 2004, news.bbc.co.uk Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 63 work is being funded by the Global Opportunities Fund. Officers from the Metropolitan Police’s SO18 division have also visited the region to discuss ways to tackle the threat from Man Portable Air Defence Systems (MANPADS). 153. The UAE has good bilateral relations with the United Kingdom and the USA. This is highlighted by cooperation in the defence field. In 1994, the UAE and USA reached a defence pact; the 1996 defence cooperation agreement is the United Kingdom’s largest single commitment to the defence of a single country outside Nato.200 154. The EU has no representation in the UAE. During our visit, we were told that given the absence of regionally administered development programmes, it has been difficult for the EU to secure funds to set up a mission in the UAE. We also heard concern that the lack of an EU presence is contributing to a failure to create a good image for the EU in the region and that the UAE–EU relationship ‘lacks substance’. 155. EU relations with the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) are channelled through a Cooperation Agreement signed in 1989 between the European Community and the GCC. Negotiations for an EU–GCC Free Trade Agreement were opened in 1990 and re-launched in 2001 after the GCC moved to establish a customs union; there is concern that negotiations have been ‘dragging on’. The Commission is also seeking to enhance cooperation activities with the GCC against the framework of the Strategic Partnership for the Mediterranean and the Middle East approved by the European Council in June 2004. 156. In May 2004, the members of the GCC agreed a counter-terrorism accord. This accord focuses on intelligence sharing and efforts to use the media and religious platforms to tackle terrorism.201 However, there are doubts over how effective the accord is. The Gulf States Newsletter has commented that the lack of transparency over the accord has given many the impression that its announcement was more “style than substance”.202 During our visit to the region, these sentiments were echoed. We were told that there is a need for greater cross-border cooperation on terrorism, but that as is the case internationally, intelligence communities are reluctant to share information. Financial reform 157. The UAE has taken a number of steps to tighten regulation of the financial system. During our visit we heard about money laundering legislation that has been formulated in line with international Financial Action Task Force (FATF) directives.203 Steps have also been taken to bring the hawala system under control204. According to the International Monetary Fund’s 2005 Article IV Consultation for the UAE: Major steps have been taken to put in place a strong legal framework to prevent money laundering and financing of terrorist activities. Two laws were passed in 2004, 200 “Gulf states keep lid on extent of defence ties”, Financial Times, 18 February 2003 201 Gulf States Newsletter, volume 28, number 753, 28 May 2004 202 Ibid 203 “Arabia bridles at Americans’ insistence on al-Qaeda cash”, Financial Times, 21 February 2002 204 The hawala system is based on paperless, record-less transactions, conducted by phone. There are no auditable records of transactions, which are based on trust. 64 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism one on dealing with financing of terrorism and the other addressing AML/CFT [anti-money laundering/counter-terrorist financing] issues in the financial free zones. A law criminalizing money laundering that was adopted in 2002 has been widely cited as a model of best practices. Hawala dealers continue to voluntarily register and have been certified by the CBU. As of end-February 2005, the CBU has received 156 registration applications and 133 certificates have been issued.205 158. Frank Gardner told the Committee about these measures. He also highlighted the role played by the United Kingdom in assisting these efforts: “If you talk to the Foreign Office you will find that there are a number of people in Customs & Excise who, every now and then, are stationed in the British Embassy in Dubai.”206 During our visit to the region we heard about the success of cross-departmental work in British embassies, notably the posting of a secondee from HM Treasury at the embassy in Abu Dhabi to work with the UAE Central Bank on anti-laundering exercises, and Home Office and HM Revenue & Customs staff working at the embassy in Abu Dhabi. 159. Nevertheless, there are concerns over both the utility of efforts to tackle terrorism through banking reform and the continued exploitation of the hawala system, despite increased regulation. Banks have been forced by compliance rules to spend hundreds of millions of dollars recording details about transactions. However, there are doubts over whether banking systems are likely to spot impending terrorist attacks.207 In large part, this is because terrorist funds are tiny and according to some estimates make up just 1% of the dirty money in the financial system. Terrorist attacks do not require large amounts of money. 160. Many in the sector have come to believe that there is little preventative value in antiterrorism regulations. “The only practical use of data about transactions is after an attack, when there might be some chance of tracing links in the networks that sustain terrorist movements… But information to allow this existed before the introduction of today’s massive regulatory system…. There is no risk in scrapping the specific rules relating to terrorist finance. Much information will still be captured, because parallel efforts to combat money laundering will continue (and are anyway more effective).”208 This opinion was strongly expressed to the Committee during its visit to the region. We heard great frustration over the emphasis put on banking reform to tackle terrorist financing. We were told that while the banking sector can work to uncover money laundering, exposing terrorist financing and proliferation is a job for the intelligence agencies and the police. 161. There are also doubts over the impact of reform on the hawala system. This method of money transfer has been used for generations; many immigrants rely on it as a cheap way to send money home. During our visit, we were told that the hawala system is under 205 “United Arab Emirates: 2005 Article IV Consultation—Staff Report”, IMF Country Report No. 05/269, August 2005 206 Q 165 207 “The lost trail”, The Economist, 22 October 2005 208 Ibid Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 65 control in the UAE and is not extensive; only small amounts are transferred by hawala. However, while the hawala houses have genuine business, it is possible that terrorists could still make use of them. 162. Neil Partrick agreed about the limits to what can be achieved by financial regulation in the ‘war against terrorism’: [T]here is still a practical, as well as political, limit to what can be done to prevent money transfers in either direction. With the operation for example of the hawala system, which Saudi Arabia and other GCC countries are very keen to stress they monitor very carefully, it is very difficult to prevent monies reaching terrorists. The ease with which this informal transfer system can operate is what defines it; harsh constraints would render it unrecognisable and make the transfer of monies by much foreign labour in the kingdom very difficult.209 Proliferation 163. The UAE has been taking steps to tackle the risk of proliferation. In particular, it has been working with the USA: in December 2003, the USA organised a basic awareness course on WMD for UAE law enforcement agencies. This was followed by a course in May 2004 on Seaport Interdiction and Counter-Proliferation. The course was intended to enhance the ability of UAE law enforcement agencies to analyse, target and examine highrisk commercial shipments that may lead to the interdiction of weapons of mass destruction or their related delivery systems.210 164. In December 2004, the USA and Dubai signed a Container Security Initiative (CSI) Statement of Principles aimed at screening US bound containerised cargo transiting Dubai ports.211 Our predecessor Committee’s last Report in this inquiry outlined the establishment of the CSI by the USA. It noted: “The United Kingdom joined the CSI in December 2002; ports included in the initiative are Felixstowe, Liverpool, Southampton, Thamesport and Tilbury. However, the United Kingdom does not have officials carrying out a similar function in major ports overseas. Without the posting of HM Customs officials overseas, the United Kingdom’s ports may remain under terrorist threat.” The Report concluded that “the Container Security Initiative is a sound means to promote the security of the United States. We recommend that the Government examine the possibilities of enacting a similar initiative to secure the ports of the United Kingdom and its Overseas Territories.”212 Educational and religious reform 165. Similarly to Saudi Arabia, the UAE has been taking steps to reform religious teaching and the education system in order to address the root causes of terrorism. The government 209 Ev 185 210 See: uae.usembassy.gov/uae 211 “The United Arab Emirates (UAE): Issues for U.S. Policy”, Congressional Research Service Report for Congress, 9 May 2005 212 HC (2004–05) 36–I, paras 437–439 66 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism of the UAE is well aware of the causes of radicalisation and realises that it is necessary to keep track of what imams are preaching and schools are teaching. Crown Prince Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed al Nahyan (the Crown Prince of the Emirate of Abu Dhabi) has been particularly vocal on the need to address the religious aspects. Following the November 2005 terrorist attacks in Jordan, he said: “There should be a firm stand by Islamic clerics and scholars who live among us against this terrorism… Personally, I blame the clerics and Islamic scholars who live among us and with us. If they do not declare them apostate, the least they would do is to drive them out of the faith. Terrorism came to us in the name of Islam, so there is no point trying to throw it into other directions. We should be the ones who confront and resist it.”213 During its visit to the region, the Committee heard about some of the work being done to regulate mosques and religious teaching. The Committee was also interested to hear that the President’s religious adviser has forged strong links with a number of British institutions. 166. The Committee also heard about the need to reform the school curriculum, which is “not as robust and complete as it should be”. We heard that one problem has been that the education system relies on foreign teachers and there is concern that some of them have been ‘misrepresenting’ Islam to pupils. We also heard concern over the use of schools and mosques to brainwash people and “convince youth to commit horrific acts”. We were reassured that the UAE authorities are seized of the need to confront this problem. Nevertheless, the Committee also heard concern over the impact of western policies in the region and their role in causing indignation among Muslims, assisting the efforts of errant clerics. 167. We conclude that the UAE is an important ally in the international ‘war against terrorism’. We further conclude that the UAE has taken important steps to improve banking regulation in order to target money laundering; we welcome the role of British personnel in this area. However, we conclude that there are limits to what regulation of the banking sector can achieve with regard to terrorist financing. We further conclude that important work is being done to tackle the risk of proliferation, in large part through work between the UAE and the USA by means of the Container Security Initiative (CSI). We recommend that the Government set out in its response to this Report its current position on placing British officials in major ports overseas to improve security for the United Kingdom and its Overseas Territories. 168. We conclude that the public and Congressional concern in the USA at the prospect of a deal that would have given Dubai Ports World control over a number of US ports is very regrettable, and sends the wrong signals to the Arab and Muslim world. However, we also conclude that the level of regional cooperation is not as high as it could be. We recommend that the Government work to support regional efforts at cooperation where appropriate and that it set out in its response to this Report what steps it is taking in this regard. We conclude that as a Muslim country, the UAE has an important role to play in countering sources of terrorism, such as religious teaching and education system; indeed, the Federation’s leaders have provided bold and courageous leadership 213 The Emirates News Agency, “Mohammad expresses solidarity with Jordan over bombings”, 18 November 2005 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 67 in this regard. We further conclude that the UAE’s experience in this area could provide useful lessons for the United Kingdom. The UAE and Reform Democratisation 169. The UAE is a federation of seven emirates. The style of government has been described as “medieval feudalism… with a veneer of 21st century regulations”.214 The UAE has no democratically elected institutions and political parties are banned. 170. During our visit to the region, we were told that the UAE is one country where a traditional form of consultation works effectively. The population are able to express their concerns directly to the leadership through traditional consultative mechanisms, such as the open majlis (council) held by many leaders. This system is made possible by the small size of the population: according to the UN, the population is around 4.5 million, of which 75–80% are believed to be foreign.215 There are regular meetings with the ruling sheikhs at which people can raise their concerns.216 171. The UAE is politically stable and there are few calls for reform. While there have been demands by a number of intellectuals for elections to the Federal National Council (FNC, a 40-strong consultative body that acts as a parliament but is appointed by the rulers of the seven sheikhdoms and is limited to an advisory role), pressure for political reform is muted by free healthcare and education, a booming economy and domestic stability.217 Frank Gardner told the Committee about the lack of interest in politics in the UAE: “The UAE is essentially non-political. I have never met any Emirati who is interested in politics: he wants his plot of land, his villa, his four-wheel drive, and his holidays twice a year to Orlando or Paris. They are not interested in politics there.”218 During our visit, we were told that the UAE is a unique case: it is a wealthy, small country with no compelling economic reason for reform. 172. Nonetheless the UAE’s leadership knows that things will have to change. We were assured that the UAE’s ruler, Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayid al Nahyan, recognises the need for a more democratic system and is likely to act soon. Indeed, shortly after our visit tentative reform measures were announced. In a speech delivered in Abu Dhabi, Sheikh Khalifa said the UAE was to “embark on a march that culminates in more participation and interaction from all the citizens of the country”. This will begin with limited reform of the FNC.219 How far this reform will go is unclear. The highest decision-making body remains the Federal Supreme Council, which is made up of the leaders of the Emirates.220 214 “Off centre: The veil over dirty money in Dubai”, Financial Times, 24 February 2001 215 “World Population Prospects”, Population Division of the Department of Economic and Social Affairs of the United Nations Secretariat, available at: esa.un.org/unpp 216 “Few want vote in booming Dubai”, BBC News Online, 29 July 2005, news.bbc.co.uk 217 Ibid 218 Q 166 219 “UAE to begin electoral reforms”, Financial Times, 2 December 2005 220 “The United Arab Emirates (UAE): Issues for U.S. Policy”, Congressional Research Service Report for Congress, 9 May 2005 68 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 173. We conclude that there is a serious democratic deficit in the UAE, although informal channels of consultation appear to go some way to address the needs of the population. We recommend that the Government work to support moves towards democratisation in the UAE, offering assistance wherever appropriate. Human rights 174. There are a number of human rights concerns in the UAE. One key area is the rights for foreign workers. As with other countries in the region, the UAE is heavily reliant on migrant workers: an estimated 75–80% of the population is foreign. These workers are often excluded from the rights afforded to nationals and are denied basic rights such as freedom of association and the right to collective bargaining. 175. Construction workers face particular difficulties. Human Rights Watch recently conducted research into the problem. The organisation found that employers routinely deny construction workers their wages. According to official figures, in 2005 alone, nearly 20,000 workers filed complaints about the non-payment of wages and labour conditions. Most construction workers secure work in the UAE by taking loans from recruiting agencies in their home country. A typical construction worker uses a large portion of his wages to repay these loans, and without wages he falls further into debt. The result is “virtual debt bondage”. There are also reports that death and injury at the workplace are on the rise.221 176. In a press release issued in March 2006, Human Rights Watch called on the UAE to take immediate steps to end abusive labour and criticised it for being “unwilling to make a real commitment to stop systematic abuses by employers, including the extended nonpayment of wages, the denial of proper medical care, and the squalid conditions in which most migrant workers live.”222 In particular, Human Rights Watch called on the UAE Government to: • Expand its staff overseeing migrant labour treatment (according to government sources, the ministry of labour employs only 80 inspectors to oversee the activities of nearly 200,000 businesses that sponsor and employ migrant workers). • Reform its labour laws to conform to international standards set by the International Labor Organization, and become a party to the International Convention on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of Their Families. 177. Human Rights Watch also called on the international community to take firmer action on the issue. In particular it called on the USA, the United Kingdom and Australia, which are currently negotiating free trade agreements with the UAE, to: • Require the UAE to improve labour practices and legal standards before signing agreements. 221 Human Rights Watch, UAE: Address Abuse of Migrant Workers , 30 March 2006 222 Ibid Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism • 69 Include in any free-trade agreement strong, enforceable workers’ rights provisions that require parties’ labour laws to meet international standards, and the effective enforcement of these laws. 178. Following the criticism by Human Rights Watch, the UAE government announced changes to the regulations governing foreign workers. According to press reports, an amendment to the labour law is awaiting cabinet approval and would pave the way for the establishment of a labour union. New regulations would require companies to pay workers through cash dispensing machines, giving the authorities a quick audit of companies that are delaying payments. Compulsory health insurance is also due to come into effect by the end of 2006.223 179. Another issue of international concern is the use of small children as camel jockeys. The FCO’s annual human rights report commented on this issue: There have been significant improvements during the reporting period in the UAE. The ministry of interior has replaced the camel racing federation as the organisation responsible for regulating the sport. Publicity campaigns by Anti-Slavery International and the American TV channel AHBO’s Real Sports programme, highlighting the practice of small children being used as camel jockeys, have played a major part in persuading the federal authorities to take such a firm stance on this issue. A prominent advertising campaign by the ministry of interior in February 2005 announced regulations, issued by presidential decree, prohibiting the use of boys under the age of 16 and less than 45 kilograms as camel jockeys. First-time offenders face fines of approximately £3,000. A second offence carries a one-year ban from camel racing and subsequent offences may incur prison sentences. Measures introduced by the ministry of interior to enforce the ban include stringent immigration checks, a requirement that all children entering the UAE must have their own passport, and DNA testing at race meetings of jockeys suspected of breaching the rules. These measures were introduced at the close of the racing season. We await the start of the new season and will seek to ensure that the regulations are being rigorously enforced.224 180. Limited press freedom is also problematic. During our visit, we were told that there is considerable self censorship by the press and that some subjects are strongly off bounds. The FCO’s human rights report also comments on this: In UAE, the government exercises some restriction in practice and journalists selfcensor. UAE law prohibits, under penalty of imprisonment, criticism of the government, ruling families, and friendly governments, as well as other statements that threaten social stability. There has been increased coverage by the print media of some contentious local issues such as poor performance of ministries and labour disputes. The presence of respected international media operators such as the BBC, 223 “UAE pledges to improve plight of migrant workers”, Financial Times, 31 March 2006 224 Foreign & Commonwealth Office, Human Rights Annual Report 2005, Cm 6606, July 2005, pp 233–234 70 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism Reuters and CNN at Dubai Media City has led to greater openness in the media, though there remains room for further improvement.225 181. In recent years, the UAE has made some progress on women’s rights. In January 1999, the wife of former ruler Sheikh Zayid said that women would be given a role in the country’s political life. Sheikh Zayid subsequently appointed a women as Under-Secretary of the Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs—the first woman to hold a high-ranking post. Shortly before his death, Sheikh Zayid appointed the first female minister, Sheikha Lubna al Qassimi, to head a combined economy and planning ministry. In 2003, Sharjah appointed five women to its 40-seat consultative council and increased the number to seven in 2004. However, no women have been appointed to the Federal National Council. In 2004, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs increased the number of women in the diplomatic corps to 40, equal to 17% of the service. 182. We conclude that there remain areas of human rights concern in the UAE, notably the treatment of foreign workers. We recommend that the Government work to encourage the UAE to sign up to the remaining ILO rules and improve the status of foreign workers. We further conclude that there have been serious efforts to improve the situation of child jockeys, nevertheless, we recommend that the Government remain seized of this issue and remind the UAE of the need to protect children. 225 Ibid, July 2005, p 224 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 5 71 Israel–Palestine Developments in 2005–06 183. Since the Committee’s last Report in this inquiry, events in the Israel–Palestine conflict have continued to move with great speed and sometimes in unexpected directions. However, progress towards peace has been slow and in recent months the prospects for success have receded. In this section of our Report, we chronicle developments since our predecessors last reported on the situation; we evaluate some of the more recent events; and we seek to draw conclusions about how British and international action might yet contribute towards putting the peace process back on course. 184. In previous Reports in this series, the Committee identified the continuing failure to achieve a peace settlement acceptable to both Israel and the Palestinians as a contributory factor in the spread of militancy among sections of Muslim society worldwide. For this reason, we deal with the Israel-Palestine question in the context of a Report on Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism. Political developments in the Palestinian Territories 185. When members of the Committee visited the Palestinian territories just weeks before the January 2006 elections to the legislative assembly, we naturally asked about the likely outcome of those elections. Most of those to whom we spoke suggested that Hamas would win between one fifth and one third of the vote. In the event, in the party list election for half of the 132 seats, Hamas gained 44.45% of the vote, against 41.43% for Fatah, giving them 30 seats to Fatah’s 27. In the first-past-the-post constituency elections for the other 66 seats, Hamas candidates won 45 seats and Fatah 17. Thus, in total, Hamas gained 74 seats and Fatah 45.226 186. Although Hamas won the elections to the Palestinian legislature, and thus fills the ministerial posts in the Palestinian Authority, much of the executive power remains in the hands of the directly elected President, Mahmoud Abbas. President Abbas is a member of Fatah and remains committed to the peace process. He also exercises control over a significant proportion of the Palestinian security forces. Members of the Quartet (the UN, the EU, the USA and Russia) have continued to deal with him since the elections. More recently, Israel has resumed high-level contact with President Abbas, with an initial meeting between him and Vice-Prime Minister Shimon Peres and Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni in Egypt on 21 May. In early June, Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said that he was ready to meet President Abbas to discuss the stalled peace process.227 Reflecting the tensions between the positions of the President and Hamas-led authority, at the end of May 2006, President Abbas proposed an 18-point peace plan, based on positions agreed by Fatah and Hamas prisoners in Israeli jails, that implicitly recognises Israel and supports the establishment of a Palestinian state in territory occupied by Israel in 1967. President Abbas 226 For the full results, see www.elections.ps and www.fairvote.org/media/pep/Palestine.pdf 227 “Israel’s PM seeks Abbas meeting”, BBC News Online, 4 June 2006, news.bbc.co.uk 72 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism has called on Hamas to support the plan, saying that if it fails to do so, he will put the plan to a national referendum.228 187. We conclude that the recognition given to the state of Israel in President Abbas’s proposed 18-point peace plan is welcome but that the recognition should be explicit rather than implicit. We recommend that the FCO state whether or not it favours the holding of a national referendum in the Palestinian territories on President Abbas’s 18point peace plan. 188. Hamas is regarded as a terrorist organisation because of its past attacks on Israeli civilians. The military wing of Hamas is among the organisations proscribed in the United Kingdom and the British Government has no dealings with it.229 However, Hamas does not operate globally and is not believed to be linked to al Qaeda. Professor Paul Wilkinson told us: “Hamas … are well aware that if they were seen to be getting into bed with al Qaeda and being seen as part of that network, they would lose an enormous amount of potential leverage in terms of the road to peace, so it would be very unwise for them to do that. They have a totally different agenda.”230 Nomi Bar-Yaacov, an independent analyst and the former Research Fellow for Conflict Management and Head of the Middle East Conflict Management Programme at the International Institute for Strategic Studies agreed with this assessment.231 189. Hamas and some other Palestinian armed groups regard the state of Israel as an illegal entity, in occupation of land which is by rights their homeland. Over time, some groups, including the Palestine Liberation Organisation under the late Yasser Arafat, have moved to a position of recognising the right of the state of Israel to exist within secure borders alongside a Palestinian state. Other groups, such as Hamas and Islamic Jihad, refuse to accept the existence of the state of Israel at all. It is this rejectionist stance, together with a refusal to commit to entirely peaceful means or to engage in the peace process, which make it impossible for most democratic states and international institutions to deal with such groups. 190. On 15 March 2006, the Prime Minister set out the United Kingdom’s policy towards Hamas: One thing should be made very clear again: we totally respect the mandate that Hamas secured in the elections. We supported those democratic elections, we support them still. But if it wants our help—both financially and politically—to make progress, it has to be on an understood basis, which means giving up violence, negotiating peacefully and accepting the existence of Israel.232 On the same day, the then Foreign Secretary, Jack Straw, told us: 228 “Palestinian stand-off over Abbas ultimatum”, Financial Times, 6 June 2006 229 For the complete list, see: security.homeoffice.gov.uk/counter-terrorism-strategy/legislation/tact/proscribed-groups 230 Q 17 231 Q 24 232 HC Deb, 15 March 2006, cols 1448–1449 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 73 [T]he more Hamas show themselves willing and able to do what the Quartet has asked, which is to respect existing international agreements and to agree on the nonviolent path, the more pressure we can put on the Israelis; the reverse is also true.233 On 12 June 2006, the Prime Minister responded to a question whether he advocated talks with Hamas by saying: “You can only negotiate with people who accept your existence and stop violence. A negotiated settlement is easily, manifestly the best thing.”234 191. We accept that no responsible government can deal directly with groups that engage in acts of terror and that Hamas has been and appears still to be such a group. However, we are also mindful of the way in which progress was eventually made after many years of abortive efforts in Northern Ireland, where mechanisms for dialogue were established, and bore fruit in the 1998 Belfast Agreement. It is possible that such a process might be developed based on informal contact and channels of communication with those who now exercise authority in the Palestinian territories, but at present the prospects for a process leading to a negotiated agreement look bleak. 192. We conclude that the Government is correct to refuse to deal directly with Hamas. We recommend that, until Hamas accepts the existence of Israel and commits itself to both to a two-state solution and exclusively peaceful means of achieving its goals, the Government should continue to refuse to deal with it directly. However, we further recommend that the Government continue to work with President Abbas, work with international organisations and non-governmental organisations in order to assist the Palestinian people, and seek out, where feasible, ‘back channels’ in order to facilitate movement towards negotiations between the Palestinians and Israelis. Aid to the Palestinians 193. Around one quarter of Palestinian households are directly dependent on a public sector wage-earner and many traders and businesses are indirectly dependent on this income. Thus, Israel’s decision to cut off customs revenues due to the Palestinian Authority and the move by international donors to freeze much of their aid following Hamas’ election victory created an economic crisis in the Palestinian territories.235 Many public sector employees, including those in the security forces, were unpaid for weeks or even months, fuelling resentment and contributing to tension. It is perhaps ironic that generous financial aid was given to the Fatah administration, which was widely perceived as corrupt, but that aid has been withheld—for entirely understandable reasons—from Hamas, which has a good reputation for financial propriety. 194. The Government was reluctant to suspend its aid programme. In March 2006, Jack Straw told us: “[W]e do not want to be in a position where aid is suspended to the Palestinian Authority. We talk about this continuously inside the European Union and with the Americans and we want to do everything we can to avoid that.”236 However, the 233 Q 191 234 “Israel puts border plan to Blair”, BBC News Online, 12 June 2006, news.bbc.co.uk 235 United Nations, Assessment of the future humanitarian risks in the occupied Palestinian territory, 11 April 2006, available at: www.humanitarianinfo.org/opt 236 Q 197 74 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism United Kingdom was among those countries that supported the Quartet’s January 2006 decision that the continued provision of direct aid to the Palestinian Authority would require it to demonstrate a “commitment to the principles of nonviolence, recognition of Israel, and acceptance of previous agreements and obligations, including the Roadmap.”237 195. Since the formation of the Hamas-led administration, Russia is the only member of the Quartet to continue to provide direct aid to the Palestinian Authority. Declarations by Iran and some Arab countries that they would make good the shortfall have amounted to little, partly because Palestinian banks are wary of their potential legal liability under US anti-terror legislation if they process such funds.238 Hamas is alleged to be among those groups that have close links with countries hostile to the peace process, notably Iran.239 In May 2006, a senior Hamas official was intercepted by Palestinian police backed by EU monitors at the Rafah crossing from Egypt, attempting to smuggle €639,000 in cash, apparently donated by Arab supporters of Hamas in Qatar.240 196. Principals of the Quartet met in New York in May to discuss how to maintain their engagement in view of Hamas’ victory. In a statement issued after the talks, they announced their “willingness to endorse a temporary international mechanism that is limited in scope and duration, operates with full transparency and accountability, and ensures direct delivery of assistance to the Palestinian people.”241 On 13 June 2006, we asked Foreign Secretary Margaret Beckett about the progress that has been made on setting up the temporary mechanism. She told us: [W]ork is proceeding with urgency to try to develop this temporary international mechanism… [T]here is a clear agreement that there should be a relatively small number of areas where we seek to put funding. We in the UK are inclined to the view that it would be best to concentrate on support for health care. Some other Member States do not want to restrict it just to health care. That discussion is ongoing. Also, of course, should such a mechanism be successfully set up there is then the issue of whether or not other players would contribute through it… There is anxiety to get this up and running as soon as possible in order to try to stave off the development of substantial humanitarian problems… I do not recall getting a deadline… but they are moving as fast as they can.242 On 19 June 2006, the EU External Relations Commissioner, Benita Ferrero-Waldner, announced that emergency aid payments were likely to be released to Palestinians from the beginning of July. Under an agreement reached by the Quartet, the EU will give 100 million euros to provide support for local health services, guarantee fuel supplies and 237 Quartet Statement, London, 30 January 2006, available at: ue.eu.int/ueDocs 238 World Bank, The Impending Palestinian Fiscal Crisis, Potential Remedies, 7 May 2006, available at: domino.un.org 239 Ev 181–184 240 “Hamas official caught smuggling cash into Gaza Strip”, Financial Times, 19 May 2006 241 Quartet Statement, 9 May 2006, available at: domino.un.org 242 Evidence from Foreign Secretary Margaret Beckett to the Inquiry into Developments in the European Union, to be published as HC 768–iv Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 75 provide for the basic needs of poor Palestinians. This money will bypass the Hamas-led government.243 197. We conclude that the Government was right to refuse to channel its aid through a Palestinian administration led by Hamas, and we endorse the Government’s support for the policy set out by the Quartet in the London statement of 30 January. However, it is important that the Palestinian people are not punished for exercising their rights as voters and we support the subsequent decision to create a mechanism for channelling aid directly to those who most need it. We recommend that the Government act with all speed to ensure that this mechanism is fully implemented and that it has the desired effect of averting an economic and humanitarian disaster in the Palestinian territories. We further recommend that the Government, in its response to this Report, set out what steps it is taken to avert an economic and humanitarian crisis in the Palestinian Territories. The Jericho incident 198. In 2002, as part of the Ramallah Agreement which ended the Israeli siege of President Arafat’s headquarters in the West Bank, the United Kingdom and the USA agreed to provide a number of unarmed officials to monitor the detention of six Palestinian prisoners, including four convicted of involvement in the murder of an Israeli government minister.244 The prisoners were detained by the Palestinian Authority and held in a prison in Jericho. Palestinian security forces were responsible for the safety of all those involved. 199. As the then Foreign Secretary told the House on 14 March 2006, over a period of a year the Government had become increasingly concerned about the level of security at the prison and the danger that this exposed the monitors to.245 After a series of representations to the highest levels of the Palestinian Authority failed to improve the situation, the British and US governments decided to withdraw their monitors, for their own safety. In compliance with the terms of the Ramallah Agreement, the governments simultaneously informed both the Palestinian and the Israeli authorities that this was happening. Immediately after the withdrawal, Israeli forces seized the prisoners and removed them for trial in Israel. 200. When we questioned the then Foreign Secretary about this incident, he was robust in defending his actions and in apportioning responsibility: [M]y principal concern was the security of the monitors, but the responsibility for their security rested with the Palestinian Authority, and they knew that. They failed to meet the conditions of the Ramallah Agreement and they placed the monitors in circumstances where their security was being compromised. What has happened is tragic, but I am afraid to say the responsibility has to rest with the Palestinian Authority and with the prisoners themselves, who pushed their luck in terms of wilfully breaking the terms of the Ramallah Agreement. They knew, everybody knew, 243 "EU set to release Palestinian aid", BBC News Online, 19 June 2006, news.bbc.co.uk 244 HC Deb, 29 April 2002, col 668 245 HC Deb, 14 March 2006, col 1295 76 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism that this arrangement with the prisoners being held in a Jericho prison under international supervision was an alternative to only one thing, namely incarceration in an Israeli jail, and I think they made the wrong choices.246 Notwithstanding the former Foreign Secretary’s comments, the fact remains that the Jericho incident and the subsequent unrest in the West Bank and Gaza, during which a British Council library was destroyed by a mob, underline the mistrust of the United Kingdom felt among sections of Palestinian society. This is despite the fact that the United Kingdom is the second highest donor to the Palestinian people and organised the London Meeting to encourage and coordinate assistance to the Palestinian Authority. Political developments in Israel 201. The dramatic developments of the Palestinian elections overshadowed an equally unforeseen change in Israeli politics, with the incapacitation of Prime Minister Ariel Sharon and the emergence of Ehud Olmert as the new leader of the newly-established Kadima party and, following the elections to the Knesset, as Prime Minister of Israel. Mr Olmert has continued the policies of his predecessor and has announced that, although he is willing to negotiate with a Palestinian administration that recognises Israel’s right to exist, he will if necessary implement a solution of his own devising. From his policy speeches, it seems likely that Mr Olmert’s vision is for the withdrawal of Israeli settlers from outposts and from outlying settlements in the West Bank, the incorporation of other settlements into Israel behind the separation barrier, the incorporation of the whole of Jerusalem and continued Israeli military control beyond the barrier.247 202. When we visited Israel and the West Bank in November 2005, we saw how in the two years since the Committee’s previous visit the barrier had been extended around and even through Jerusalem. A vast programme of building in the area to the East of Jerusalem called Ma’ale Adumim and the adjacent ‘E1’ zone was creating new facts on the ground, and the Palestinian population’s freedom of movement was increasingly restricted, with consequential damage to the economy. The ‘trisection’ of the West Bank into North, Central and South zones and the isolation of some towns has caused a significant increase in journey times for Palestinians within the West Bank, in some cases by a factor of three.248 Continued violence 203. In mid-June, Hamas resumed rocket fire against Israeli targets for the first time in nearly 18 months. This was in response to an alleged Israeli naval strike on 9 June, in which seven Palestinians were killed on a Gaza beach. Hamas, along with most other Palestinian groupings, had been observing a ceasefire for some time, but other groups such as Islamic Jihad had refused to abandon what they see as their struggle for liberation. Suicide bombings, rocket attacks (many of them launched from the Gaza Strip) and other acts of violence against both the Israeli Defence Forces and Israeli civilians have continued 246 Q 187 247 “Israel 'has to withdraw further'”, BBC News Online, 24 January 2006, news.bbc.co.uk; and “What Does Olmert Want?”, The New York Review of Books, June 2006 248 “West Bank closure count and analysis”, United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), January 2006, available at: www.humanitarianinfo.org/opt Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 77 unabated. A suicide bombing in Tel Aviv on 17 April 2006 killed ten; it was swiftly condemned by President Abbas, but the leadership of Hamas referred to the outrage as a “legitimate act of self-defence” and refused to denounce it.249 The Minister for the Middle East, Kim Howells, rightly described this behaviour as “unacceptable and reprehensible.”250 204. In retaliation, Israel has shelled areas of the Gaza Strip from which rockets are believed to have been fired. It has also carried out ‘targeted’ assassinations, and has continued to mount military operations in the West Bank, in the course of which many Palestinians have died.251 Palestinians are also subject to violence from extremist groups of Israeli settlers.252 Palestinians have also been the victims of violence between different Palestinian factions. In May 2006, fighting broke out between Palestinian security forces under the authority of President Abbas and militias loyal to Hamas. On 22 May, the victims included a Jordanian official accredited to Jordan’s diplomatic mission in Gaza. The FCO has rightly condemned this violence.253 205. As we have noted already, Israel has continued with construction of the security barrier, which it sees as the most effective means of defence against violent attack by Palestinians.254 In previous Reports we have made clear our concerns about the security barrier.255 We accept, as does the Government, that Israel has a sovereign right to erect such a barrier along its internationally recognised border if it wishes, but it does not have a right to construct it on Palestinian land; at present, 80% of the barrier lies on Palestinian land.256 The route and form of the barrier, as well as the extensive system of checkpoints throughout the Palestinian territories, severely disrupt the daily life of thousands of Palestinians and impair the viability of a Palestinian state. 206. We reiterate the Committee’s previous conclusions on the illegality of the current route of the separation barrier and underline our concerns about the impact it is having on the lives of ordinary Palestinians. We recommend that the Government continue to make the strongest representations to the Israeli authorities to align the route of the barrier with the 1967 border and that it raise the question of the present alignment of the barrier in international fora such as the new United Nations Council on Human Rights. The withdrawal from Gaza 207. The most dramatic development in 2005 was Israel’s unilateral withdrawal from the 141 square miles of the Gaza Strip and the return of the whole of that territory to Palestinian administration in August. This move, which was bitterly opposed by some 249 “United States Deplores Hamas’ Defense of Tel Aviv Terror Attack”, US State Department, 17 April 2006 250 HC Deb, 3 May 2006, col 512–513WH 251 Letter to the UN General Assembly from the Permanent Observer of Palestine, dated 5 April 2006 252 “Protection of Civilians”, weekly briefing notes by UN OCHA, available at: domino.un.org 253 “Howell’s reaction to unrest in Gaza”, FCO News Release, 23 May 2006 254 Q 36 255 Foreign Affairs Committee, Second Report of Session 2003–04, Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism, HC 81, para 157; HC (2003–04) 441–I, para 396; and HC (2004–05) 36–I, para 316 256 HC Deb, 9 May 2006, col 192W 78 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism Israelis, marked a significant change in direction by Prime Minister Sharon and led to the break-up of his Likud party. In November 2005, US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice brokered a deal under which Israel, the Palestinian Authority and the Quartet agreed to work together to put in place a series of measures intended to ensure that the people of Gaza could prosper, while addressing the legitimate security concerns of Israelis. The Agreement on Movement and Access (AMA) and the associated Agreed Principles for Rafah Crossing were described by Dr Rice thus: First, for the first time since 1967, Palestinians will gain control over entry and exit from their territory. This will be through an international crossing at Rafah, whose target opening date is November 25th. Second, Israel and the Palestinians will upgrade and expand other crossings for people and cargo between Israel, Gaza and the West Bank. This is especially important now because Israel has committed itself to allow the urgent export of this season’s agricultural produce from Gaza. Third, Palestinians will be able to move between Gaza and the West Bank; specifically, bus convoys are to begin about a month from now and truck convoys are to start a month after that. Fourth, the parties will reduce obstacles to movement within the West Bank. It has been agreed that by the end of the year the United States and Israel will complete work to lift these obstacles and develop a plan to reduce them. Fifth, construction of a Palestinian seaport can begin. The Rafah model will provide a basis for planned operations. Sixth, the parties agree on the importance of the airport. Israel recognizes that the Palestinian Authority will want to resume construction on the airport. I am encouraging Israel to consider allowing construction to resume as this agreement is successfully implemented—construction that could, for instance, be limited to nonaviation elements.257 This agreement promised much. More than eight months on, what has been delivered? 257 See www.state.gov/secretary/rm/2005/56890.htm Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism The Gaza Strip After Israeli Disengagement - 2005 Beit Lahia Erez Industrial Zone Future Seaport Sderot Beit Hanoun Gaza ra ne an S ea Jabalia Erez Crossing ed it er Karni / Muntar Crossing M Nusseirat Bureij RC Netivot Deir Al-Balah Maghazi Palestinian Localities Former Israeli Settlement Blocs Khan Younis ISRAEL Greenhouse Cultivation Palestinian Coastal Strip Cultivation (Al-Mawasi) PT EYG Industry Area Palestinian Road Rafah Rafah Terminal Int. Crossing Israeli Road Link Airport Sufa / Matar Crossing Crossing Points Green Line 10 km Kerem Shalom Int. Cargo Crossing Map : © Jan de Jong Source: PASSIA – Palestinian Academic Society for the Study of International Affairs 79 80 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 208. With the assistance of EU monitors, the Rafah crossing opened for foot passengers only on 25 November 2005. Members of this Committee visited it a few days later and found an efficiently-run, busy border crossing, with Palestinian staff working under the close watch of Italian Carabinieri and other European police officers, including some from Demark and Romania, the whole operation being monitored remotely by Israeli cameras. Although the crossing has since been the scene of violence and from time to time has been closed—for example, when Fatah gunmen barred access to it in January 2006258—it is generally regarded as a success. 209. The agreement also made provisions for crossings for the movement of people and goods between Gaza and Israel. When some of us visited in November 2005 we saw two of these crossings in action. At the Erez crossing, which is the main point of access for travellers, we spent three hours waiting to get through owing to the ‘loss’ of our entry permission by the Israeli authorities. Once in Gaza, we visited the Palestinian side of the ‘back-to-back’ freight crossing at Karni. There, we saw how trucks unload their cargo on one side of a high concrete wall. The goods are then transferred to a concrete pen and scanned, pallet by pallet or even item by item. The steel doors on one side of the pen are closed, those on the other side are opened and the goods are loaded onto another truck for the next stage of the journey. This process, which is in place primarily to protect Israel from arms or explosives that could otherwise be smuggled with the cargoes, may take several hours. Frequently, the crossing is closed for hours or even days at a time. For example, in 2005 the crossing was closed on 18 percent of days. From 1 January to 26 April 2006, the crossing was closed for 47 percent of days and even when it was open for goods crossing from Israel into Gaza, exports from Gaza to Israel and beyond were severely limited.259 210. According to a report by the United Nations Office for Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) in April 2006: Between 1 January and 20 April, more than 8,400 tonnes of produce had been harvested in the [Gaza] greenhouses. Of this, only 1,500 tonnes has been exported. The remainder has been distributed to PEDC’s [Palestine Economic Development Council] 4,100 employees, donated to local hospitals and societies or else been destroyed. ‘Dumping’ produce on the local market has not been a serious option for fear of further deflating prices for other producers. Total losses incurred by the PEDC now exceed US$ 8.5 million.260 This is clearly at variance from both the spirit and the letter of the AMA, which states that: [B]y December 31 [2005] … the number of export trucks per day to be processed through Karni will reach 150, and 400 by end-2006. … In addition to the number of trucks above, Israel will permit export of agricultural produce from Gaza and will 258 “Gaza chaos escalates as Egypt border blocked”, Agence France–Presse, 4 January 2006 259 “Gaza Strip Situation Report 26 Apr 2006”, UN Office for Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs 260 Ibid Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 81 facilitate its speedy exit and onward movement so that quality and freshness can be maintained. Israel will ensure the continued opportunity to export.261 211. Israeli concerns about the possibility of weapons or explosives being smuggled from Gaza were underlined when on 26 April 2006 Palestinian police reportedly intercepted a truck carrying explosives heading for Karni; the crossing was closed for four days as a result of this.262 However, those of us who visited Karni in 2005 were told that most closures are unrelated to incidents in the vicinity and that the crossing is frequently shut in response to violence in the West Bank, or for no reason at all. 212. The third element of the AMA referred to by Dr Rice was the institution of vehicle convoys between Gaza and the West Bank. With Israel increasingly inclined to isolate its economy from that of the Palestinians, trade and movement between the two Palestinian territories is essential to their economic survival.263 Under the AMA, bus convoys should have begun by mid-December 2005, and truck convoys by mid-January 2006. This did not happen. When we raised this issue during our visit to the region, we were told that Israel was insisting that the convoys run in a tunnel or deep ditch. This would obviously involve a huge construction project and would take considerable time. Israel pulled out of discussions on implementation of this aspect of the Agreement on 15 December, following a suicide bombing attack in the coastal town of Natanya. As of June 2006, there had been no convoys, although limited vehicle movements have been permitted by the Israelis. Minister of State for Europe Geoff Hoon wrote to us about this issue. Secure and reliable links between Gaza and the West Bank are crucial for the success of the Palestinian economy. Dr Howells has taken a close interest in this. Sir John Stanley is right that there is a strong case for constructing a road link between Gaza and the West Bank. The European Commission, USAID and the World Bank are scoping the prospects for doing this, along with the various alternatives, such as a rail link and/or tunnel. A safe and permanent connection between Gaza and the West Bank will make a lasting impact on the prospects for a viable Palestinian state. We are concerned that the United Nations Office for the Co-ordination of Humanitarian Affairs has reported an increase in the number of obstacles to movement in the West Bank and that the deadlines for the introduction of bus convoys by 15 December 2005 and truck convoys by 15 January 2006 were missed. We continue to urge Israel and President Abbas, bilaterally and through the Quartet, to work on the Gaza–West Bank link and other issues as set out in the 15 November Movement and Access Agreement relating to the Gaza Strip. This includes Gaza/Israel crossing points; freedom of movement in the West Bank; and the construction of an airport and seaport in Gaza.264 213. We conclude that satisfactory road and rail links between Gaza and the West Bank are essential for the creation of a viable Palestinian state. We recommend that the 261 “Agreement on Movement and Access”, 15 November 2005, available at: usinfo.state.gov/mena 262 “Gaza Strip Situation Report 3 May 2006”, UN Office for Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs 263 Q 30 264 Evidence received in the Inquiry into Developments in the European Union, to be published as HC 768 82 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism Government intensify the international efforts being made to achieve progress with these projects and provide the Committee with a full statement of the latest position in its response to this Report. 214. Obstacles to movement within the West Bank remain in place. As those of us who visited the region saw for ourselves, these obstacles include fences, road blocks and earth or rubble mounds. According to the Twelfth Report on the Implementation of the Agreement on Movement and Access, compiled by OCHA in May 2006, the number of obstacles in the West Bank has actually increased since the Agreement: to over 500, from under 400 in November 2005.265 215. There has been no progress on construction of a new seaport for Gaza, or on reconstruction of the airport, which has been closed since 2000. All goods and people wishing to enter or exit Gaza continue to have to pass through an Israeli-controlled crossing, or the Rafah crossing to Egypt. 216. It is clear that the goals of the AMA have not yet been achieved and are unlikely to be achieved for some time to come. Further international engagement, particularly by the USA, will be required if progress is to be made on any of the elements of the Agreement. International engagement 217. The AMA represented the high point of efforts to move Israel and the Palestinians closer towards peace over the past year. The Agreement was the result of a renewed engagement by the US administration, working closely with the Quartet and its Special Envoy, James Wolfensohn. In previous Reports in this series, the Committee identified US engagement as being among the most critical requirements for progress on the Middle East peace process. In 2004, we called on the Government to “do its utmost to promote greater US engagement in the Israeli–Palestinian conflict”266 and “to seek to convince the US of the importance of sending a high-level emissary to the region.”267 The visits paid to the region by Dr Rice, the appointment of James Wolfensohn as the Quartet’s Special Envoy and the appointment of General William Ward (later replaced by General Keith Dayton) as US Security Coordinator (USSC) were all positive signs of a renewed US interest and determination. 218. Therefore, it is particularly unfortunate that the election of a new Palestinian Assembly dominated by Hamas has caused difficulties for the USA and the rest of the international community in its dealings with the Palestinian Authority. In announcing his decision to resign as the Quartet’s Special Envoy, James Wolfensohn cited the election of a Hamas administration as the main reason he could no longer play a useful role.268 Mr Wolfensohn has not been replaced. The central dilemma for the USA and other countries seeking to play a role in the peace process following the Palestinian elections was succinctly 265 First and Twelfth Reports on the Implementation of the Agreement on Access and Movement, available at: domino.un.org/unispal.nsf 266 HC (2003–04) 81, para 181 267 HC (2003–04) 441, para 399 268 Remarks After Meeting With Special Envoy for Gaza Disengagement James Wolfensohn, 1 May 2006, www.state.gov Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 83 described by General Dayton in his March 2006 evidence to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee: The future is obviously an open question. But a few things are not. First and foremost is … strict adherence to the US policy of no contact with and no support of any kind for Hamas. Second is the recognition that Palestinian security sector reform and performance is an important element for progress in accordance with the Roadmap, and is essential for a viable two state solution. And third, it remains in America’s national interests to stay engaged in the Palestinian–Israeli situation, a fact that has been made even more critical by the Hamas victory. The question, I think, is how.269 General Dayton concluded his remarks as follows: I want to emphasize one final point. Let’s remember why the United States, through the agent of the USSC, is so visibly involved in the region. It is not altruism, and it is not because we have nothing else to do. We are here because it remains profoundly in the US national security interest for us to be involved in the search for peace and progress towards the two-state vision. The Hamas victory has not changed that.270 The future of the Road Map 219. At the time of preparing this Report (June 2006), the prospects for the Road Map— the Quartet’s phased plan for a two-state solution—do not look good.271 There is no expectation that Hamas will recognise Israel, and thus little prospect of a resumption of negotiations between the Israelis and the Palestinians. Without negotiations based on the Road Map, Israel is likely to seek to impose its own solution. Prime Minister Olmert and his government appear determined to proceed with enclosure of the majority of Israeli settlers behind the separation barrier and with the annexation of the land on which their homes are built, and East Jerusalem. The suicide bombers and terrorist groups show no sign of ceasing their deadly campaigns, and while such indiscriminate attacks continue the Israelis will retaliate and target those whom they believe to be responsible. The effects of this retaliation can often be indiscriminate, killing innocent people and reinforcing the cycle of violence. For as long as this state of affairs prevails, ordinary people on both sides will continue to suffer. 220. Speaking about the seemingly unstoppable construction of new Israeli settlements, the building of the separation barrier and the way this is changing the facts on the ground, Jack Straw said “What do we do? We keep up the pressure and keep talking to international partners, particularly the Americans, as I have done pretty continuously, and to the Israelis.”272 He might have said much the same in respect of the Palestinians. We asked 269 Statement by United States Security Coordinator Lieutenant General Keith W. Dayton before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, March 15, 2006, available at: www.senate.gov 270 Ibid 271 For a summary of the process that led to the Road Map proposals and the role of the Quartet, see HC (2003–04) 81 and HC (2003–04) 441–I 272 Q 136 84 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism Foreign Secretary Margaret Beckett what the Government is doing to impress upon the Israeli government the need for a negotiated settlement. She told us: We have made it extremely clear to the Israeli Government, and the Prime Minister did to the Israeli Prime Minister yesterday, that we are looking for negotiations and for a negotiated settlement and that we would view any unilateral action by the Israeli Government as—I was going to say very much second best, but we would be reluctant to see such unilateral action because we believe that negotiation is the right way forward.273 Asked whether this position was too weak, the Foreign Secretary replied I certainly do not intend the view of the British Government to sound weak… [A]lthough there were strong reservations about moves that were made unilaterally on Gaza there was nevertheless a rather grudging recognition in the end that some of these were moves in the right direction although there was obviously much preference for there to be negotiation… We have made and will continue to make it extremely clear that there has to be a serious attempt to return to the process of negotiation and that that in the long term is the only sound basis for a way forward.274 221. In our view, the USA remains the key to achieving peace in the Middle East; in the absence of a willingness by either of the directly-involved parties to make concessions or even to talk, only the intervention of the USA can facilitate progress. This was true before and it is even more true now. 222. We conclude that there is little prospect of the Israelis and Palestinians reaching any agreement on the way forward without substantial commitment and engagement by the Quartet, by regional players and above all by the USA. We recommend that the Government do everything possible both bilaterally and through international mechanisms to encourage both parties to implement their Road Map obligations. 273 Evidence from Foreign Secretary Margaret Beckett to the Inquiry into Developments in the European Union, to be published as HC 768–iv 274 Evidence from Foreign Secretary Margaret Beckett to the Inquiry into Developments in the European Union, to be published as HC 768–iv Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 6 85 Iraq Security situation Further deterioration 223. In previous Reports in the inquiry our predecessor Committee outlined the deterioration in the security situation in Iraq.275 The Reports also described the various types of violence in Iraq, ranging from ‘high-profile’ insurgent attacks aimed at the Iraqi security forces as well as individuals connected with the political process to the “tide of rampant criminality” that has emerged in the security vacuum and has affected all sectors of Iraqi society.276 Regrettably, the security situation has deteriorated still further since the last Report. Against a backdrop of continuing and already brutal violence, an attack on the al-Askari shrine in Samarra on 22 February 2006 prompted widespread protests and unleashed a wave of sectarian conflict.277 The shrine is one of the holiest sites in Shia Islam and the attack was almost certainly intended to exacerbate sectarian tension. There has also been renewed concern over the role of foreign forces with reports of the alleged massacre of 24 Iraqi civilians in the town of Haditha by US marines in November 2005.278 224. The upsurge in violence has prompted concern that the country is slipping into civil conflict, despite calls for restraint by religious and political leaders. In an indication of the size of the problem, on 10 May 2006 Iraqi President Jalal Talabani said more than 1,000 people were killed in April 2006 in Baghdad as a result of sectarian violence.279 Following the Samarra bombing, hundreds of Iraqis fled their homes.280 A Red Crescent Society report on the refugee problem in Iraq concluded that more than 100,000 people fled their homes in the two months following the Samarra attack.281 According to the report, this number is increasing and could soon reach 180,000; the refugees include both Sunnis and Shias. 225. On 5 March 2006, General Peter Pace, Chairman of the US joint chiefs of staff, said that Iraq was not on the verge of civil war, but added that Iraqis had “walked up to the abyss” with the escalation in violence. This followed comments by US Commander in Iraq General George Casey, who we met during our visit to Iraq in January 2006, who refused to rule out the possibility of civil war, saying that “anything is possible”.282 Meanwhile, former Iraqi Prime Minister Iyad Allawi has gone on the record saying that civil war has already broken out, although this view has been challenged by Iraqi as well as US and British politicians.283 275 HC (2004–05) 36-I, paras 99–103 276 HC (2004–05) 36-I, paras 100–103 277 “Iraqi blast damages Shia shrine”, BBC News Online, 22 February 2006, news.bbc.co.uk 278 “Bush ‘troubled’ by Haditha report”, BBC News Online, 31 May 2006, news.bbc.co.uk 279 “Iraq killings top 1,000 in April”, BBC News Online, 10 May 2006, news.bbc.co.uk 280 “Iraq edging towards precipice”, BBC News Online, 8 March 2006, news.bbc.co.uk 281 “Shia shrine attack blamed for refugee exodus”, Financial Times, 4 May 2006 282 “Violence took nation close 'to abyss' of civil war”, Financial Times, 6 March 2006 283 “Iraqi leaders establish new council in effort to build unity”, Financial Times, 20 March 2006 86 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 226. Our witnesses were all deeply concerned about the security situation. Zaki Chehab, Political Editor of the Arab daily newspaper al Hayat, told us that although the Samarra bombing was clearly important, “the sectarian killing started in Iraq straight after the fall of the regime.”284 Asked whether Iraq is already in a state of civil war, Yahia Said, Research Fellow of the Centre for the Study of Global Governance at the London School of Economics, told us: [T]he answer depends on how one defines civil war. If civil war is defined in terms of loss of security, in terms of the fact that there is a myriad of arms factions, militias, armed groups, and that the threat to Iraqi civilian lives and property can come from any of these groups—and in a way the groups are becoming increasingly difficult to distinguish from one another: for example, terrorists dressed as policemen; Shi’a militias working through the police units; Sunni insurgents dressed as military units —a situation like that could be defined as civil war, as a breakdown of the state’s monopoly on legitimate violence and pervasive and systemic violence. However, if one looks at civil war and thinks “Bosnia: a sort of all-out sectarian war” then Iraq is not there yet. However, Iraq is getting very close to that moment because, increasingly, not only are political elites, who have started to define themselves in ethnic terms, confronting each other, but also society is beginning to get polarised along ethnic and sectarian lines. 285 227. Describing the level of insecurity in and around the capital, Zaki Chehab told us: “Not a single road which connects the capital with any of the main cities in Iraq is safe.”286 The security arrangements for our visit to Iraq in January 2006 were certainly more rigorous than for visits to Iraq by our predecessor Committee. The last Report in this inquiry noted that despite the poor security situation, the violence had not spread throughout the country.287 In its response to that Report, the Government emphasised the point that “much of Iraq is secure… Ten provinces, including those in the Multi National Division (South East), account for less than 2% of attacks.”288 Although there remain areas that are quieter than others, our witnesses were concerned that the calmer areas are those that are homogenous in terms of ethnic and sectarian groups. We were told: “[T]he violence is concentrated in mixed areas. Everywhere where there is a co-existence of the various components of the Iraqi society there is violence: Mosul, Kirkuk, Hella, Baghdad and the areas around it. Indeed, the western areas, the ethnically homogenous, western areas of Iraq are relatively quiet, apart from insurgency operations against coalition troops and counterinsurgency operations by these troops.” 289 228. Indeed, one of the most alarming aspects of the situation has been the sectarian dimension of the violence. Our witnesses told us about some of the factors feeding into the 284 Q 263 [Mr Chehab] 285 Q 264 [Mr Said] 286 Q 265 [Mr Chehab] 287 HC (2004–05) 36–I, paras 102–103 288 Foreign & Commonwealth Office, Sixth Report of the Foreign Affairs Committee; Session 2004–05; Foreign Policy Aspects of the War Against Terrorism; Response of the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, Cm 6590, June 2005 289 Q 265 [Mr Said] Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 87 emergence of sectarian divisions. They told us that Iraq does not have a history of sectarian conflict: [H]owever we have seen sectarianism grow in Iraq, especially over the last three years. There have been many factors that have played a role in that. The most important among them is of course al Qaeda terrorism, which was always designed to foment sectarian war – always that was the intention of al Qaeda—however, there were other factors. Unfortunately a lot of the actions of Multinational Forces in Iraq have contributed to increasing sectarian polarisation; for example, using Iraqi units comprised mainly of Shi’a and Kurdish militias in Sunni areas or defining Shi’a parties and Kurdish parties as allies and defining Sunni parties as enemies. This has contributed to the polarisation. This policy had been reversed over the last six months as it became evident how counter-productive it is. However, it may be too late to prevent an all-out sectarian polarisation in the country. 290 229. We have already discussed the importance of Iraq to al Qaeda, which has made tremendous propaganda and training gains from its experience in Iraq.291 Zaki Chehab also told us about the importance that al Qaeda attaches to fomenting sectarian conflict in Iraq: “I believe the bombing of Samarra, the religious site, was carried out by Zarqawi after he felt that Sunnis for the first time in Iraq started having some kind of dialogue with the Americans—especially the influential Sunni tribes and the ones who are close to the insurgency... The only environment where Zarqawi can benefit is from seeing a Sunni– Shi’a sectarian war taking place.” 292 230. Previous Reports in this inquiry have noted the failure of Iraq’s neighbours to take sufficient steps to prevent foreign fighters from entering and leaving Iraq.293 This remains a concern. During our visit to Iraq we heard that cross-border cooperation with Syria has improved, but that the border remains porous and a number of prominent former Ba’athists continue to live in Syria. While we were in Saudi Arabia, we heard great concern over the movement of militants to and from Iraq and the spur this is providing to terrorism within the Kingdom.294 We also discuss the role that Iran has played in Iraq, and in particular links between Iran and the use of increasingly deadly improvised explosive devices in Iraq. 231. In addition to the violence perpetrated by al Qaeda and Iraqi insurgents, Iraqis continue to endure a pervasive sense of insecurity: The danger to Iraqi life and limb and property can come from any corner. It can come as collateral damage from counterinsurgency operations; it can come from criminal elements—and criminality is a very important factor in the violence taking place in Iraq today, criminality, either in its own right or dressed up as ethnic sectarian violence or as insurgency operations; it can come from rogue elements in 290 Q 264 [Mr Said] 291 See paras 18–19 292 Q 263 [Mr Chehab] 293 HC (2004–05) 36–I, HC 36–I, paras 130–133 294 See paras 74–77 88 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism the security forces; it can come from terrorists affiliated with al Qaeda. So there is a myriad of actors. This is the most frustrating thing for Iraqi civilians today, that they do not feel safe… Today, violence for most Iraqi civilians is inexplicable: they do not understand why they are being targeted and for what reason. 295 During the Committee’s visit to Iraq, we heard about the problem of endemic crime, with organised crime, smuggling and kidnapping posing particular problems. 232. We conclude that the continued deterioration in the security situation in Iraq is extremely worrying, as are the deepening sectarian and ethnic dimensions of the violence. We further conclude that Iraq’s neighbours have yet to take sufficient steps to prevent the movement of insurgents across Iraq’s borders, although we note that the length and porous nature of these borders make this task extremely difficult. Iraqi Security Forces 233. Previous Reports in this inquiry have discussed efforts to build the new Iraqi Security Forces (ISF). Our predecessor Committee noted the growing strength as well as the great bravery of the ISF, which were credited with much of the success of the January 2005 election.296 However, the Committee also noted very serious concerns over both numbers and capability. In its response to the last Report in this inquiry, the Government said: “Helping the Iraqi Security Forces (ISF) to take over security progressively within Iraq is one of the Government’s prime objectives. The Government continues to develop training programmes and provide equipment to develop the Iraqi police and military.”297 The Government went on to set out the progress that had been made at that point, listing the numbers trained and equipped and outlining international cooperation in this training. 234. In October 2005, the former Foreign Secretary told us: The other thing that has happened for the good—and this has been, again, a very big change in the last year—is that approximately 170,000 more Iraqi security forces have been trained up. Their ability to operate independently of the US, UK and other coalition forces varies considerably. There are two battalions that can operate entirely independently, but a great many can operate effectively with backing from the coalition. That has been a big change. The progress with the defence forces has been better than progress with the police in some areas where problems remain.298 Despite all this good work, concerns remain over the slow progress of building up the ISF. In a recent article, Anthony Cordesman of the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) outlined some of the issues. Cordesman notes that Iraq is making real progress in many aspects of its force development, but that there has been “a dangerous tendency to spin analysis and coverage of Iraqi force development” around the status of the 295 Q 266 [Mr Said] 296 HC (2004–05) 36–I, paras 123–129 297 Foreign & Commonwealth Office, Sixth Report of the Foreign Affairs Committee; Session 2004–05; Foreign Policy Aspects of the War Against Terrorism; Response of the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, Cm 6590, June 2005 298 Q 79 [Mr Straw] Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 89 regular army. The police and border police have little effective equipment, major facility problems, weak training and serious manpower quality problems. These forces have also been linked with death squads and poor discipline. In addition, many police units are linked with particular ethnic or sectarian groups. Turning to Iraq’s regular forces, only the Army and Special Operations Forces have any real effectiveness and there remain concerns over combat capability.299 We heard about many of these problems during our visit to Iraq. 235. Links between the ISF and death squads have been particularly worrisome. Zaki Chehab told us about this: “Yesterday the American forces have announced that they have arrested more than 40 Iraqi policemen who were involved in death squads. Two weeks ago, the Ministry of the Interior came out to say, ‘We managed to arrest 450 people who have joined the police force and they were part of al Qaeda or something, and they were trying to plan to attack the Green Zone.’” 300 The US State Department’s annual human rights report, which was published in March 2006, includes a damning critique of the state of human rights in Iraq, describing a weak and corrupt government with little control over its own security forces.301 The report highlights the problems of extra-legal killings, arbitrary detention and torture committed by members of the ISF, both police and military. 236. A recent report by the International Crisis Group into the insurgency emphasises the importance the legitimacy of the Iraqi government and Iraqi security forces in the fight against insurgents. It notes: “The harm from excessive use of force, torture, tactics that inflict widespread civilian injury and reliance on sectarian militias outweighs any military gain.”302 In particular, the report notes the importance that international allies in Iraq “hold the new government accountable and make clear that long-term relations, economic aid and military cooperation depend on disbanding militias, halting political killings and respecting human rights.” 237. Yahia Said links the problem with difficulties establishing national legitimacy: “Security Forces are a matter of nationalism. Security Forces ride not necessarily on equipment and efficiency but on legitimacy, and it is very difficult to built legitimate armed forces and Security Forces under foreign tutelage—especially if the issue of the foreign presence is so contentious in society.” 303 However, he also highlighted the failures of Coalition policy: As long as the Americans were trying to build the Iraqi Armed Forces in a rigorous way, trying to avoid the incorporation of militias, trying to build an ethnically mixed armed force with loyalty to the state, the process was going very slowly, because very few of Iraqi nationalists or patriots were willing to join the Armed Forces and people were joining them for material gain more than anything else. As soon as the Americans started to accelerate that timetable by trying to incorporate the militias, that process went faster, but these people had an entirely different motivation than 299 “Iraqi Forces: The Other Side of the Development Story”, Anthony H. Cordesman, CSIS, 22 March 2006 300 Q 269 [Mr Chehab] 301 “Country Reports on Human Rights Practices—2005”, released by the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor, US State Department, 8 March 2006, available at: www.state.gov 302 “In their own words: Reading the Iraqi Insurgency”, International Crisis Group, Middle East Report N°50, 15 February 2006 303 Q 268 [Mr Said] 90 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism that one would expect from the Armed Forces. They were joining it to pursue their own agenda, their own sectarian and ethnic agenda. As we see today, especially in the recent events in recent days, these Armed Forces are very happy to break ranks with the Americans and the British who have trained them, as long as they perceive any conflict of interest there. 304 The last Report in this inquiry noted the danger that relying on Shia and Kurdish communities to build up the ISF risked “sowing the seeds of future ethnic and sectarian conflict”305 In its Response, the Government said: “The UK, along with the Iraqi government and partners from the Multi-National Force, is aware of the dangers of associating particular ethnic groups with branches of the ISF and the UK is working with the Iraqi authorities to minimise this.”306 Nevertheless, there are clear concerns over the hardening of sectarian identity in Iraq. At the end of February 2006, US Ambassador to Iraq Zalmay Khalilzad warned the USA would cut funding for Iraq’s security services unless the new Iraqi government appointed ‘non-sectarian’ ministers of the interior, defence and national intelligence, saying: “We’re not going to invest the resources of the American people to build forces run by people who are sectarian”.307 238. We conclude that despite continued hard work to build up the Iraqi Security Forces, and the dedication and bravery of many of the members of those forces, they remain a long way from being able to take the lead on security across Iraq. We further conclude that relying on Shia and Kurdish communities to build up the Iraqi Security Forces has contributed to the development of sectarian forces and that this is regrettable in the volatile security and political environment in Iraq. We recommend that the Government continue to work with its international partners to address this problem and make clear to the Iraqi authorities the importance of legitimate national Security Forces. We further recommend that the Government set out in its response to this Report what steps it is taking to assist the Iraqi authorities to establish a security infrastructure that respects human rights. Multi-National Force 239. On 13 March 2006, then Defence Secretary John Reid announced a reduction in the number of British forces in Iraq: [T]here will be a reduction of British forces in Iraq of about 800 personnel. That reflects the completion of our security sector reform tasks to develop the capability of the Iraqi forces, including training the trainers and those involved in guarding their own institutions. The reduction also reflects improvements in the way we configure our own forces. Our force levels reflect the in-theatre assessments in the south-east of Iraq. Today's announcement marks a reduction from the high point of some 10,000 UK personnel in October 2003 to just over 7,000 from May this year… 304 Ibid 305 HC (2004–05) 36–I, para 129 306 Foreign & Commonwealth Office, Sixth Report of the Foreign Affairs Committee; Session 2004–05; Foreign Policy Aspects of the War Against Terrorism; Response of the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, Cm 6590, June 2005 307 “Bush calls for restraint as fears of civil war rise”, Financial Times, 23 February 2006 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 91 Let me stress that the reductions that I have announced today are not part of a handover of security responsibility at operational level. They have not been caused by, nor are they the cause of, changes in troop levels of other coalition allies. In the next few weeks, the joint committee to transfer security responsibility—a body made up of Iraqi ministers, military staff and senior coalition figures—will start the assessment phase to determine whether conditions have been met for some provinces in Iraq to begin the handover process. Today is not that stage of handover. When the committee has reached conclusions, I will of course come back and update the House on the implications of that assessment.308 240. The Prime Minister has consistently refused to set out a timetable for the withdrawal from Iraq. The Government’s long-standing policy has been to support the development of the ISF and hand over to them as and when they are able to take the lead on security.309 In its last Report in this inquiry, our predecessor Committee asked the Government to set out its plans to hand over to the ISF. The Government responded by saying: During 2005 there will be a progressive transition from MNF leading on counter insurgency effort to the Iraqis taking the lead. The Iraqi Security Forces (ISF) have already become increasingly involved in or led in, operations in Fallujah, Najaf, Samarra, North Babil and Baghdad… The Government wants British forces to leave Iraq as soon as possible, but not until the job is done. The UK will stay in Iraq for as long as it takes to ensure Iraqi Security Forces are able to take responsibility for Iraq’s security, and as long as the Iraqi Government wants us to stay.310 241. On 19 June Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Maliki announced that the ISF would take over control of security in July in the southern province of Muthana, where 250 British troops are currently based along with Australian and Japanese forces. Prime Minister Malaki was reported as saying that his government plan gradually to take over security for all Iraq's provinces within the next eighteen months. The Defence Secretary, Des Browne, stated that “What it does is begin the process which will eventually lead to our ability to draw down our forces in Iraq. A great deal of work remains to be done and I am under no illusions about the challenges we face. We and our coalition allies remain determined to see the job through.”311 Japan subsequently announced its intention to withdraw its forces from Iraq. The last Japanese troops are expected to leave by late July.312 242. In addition to concerns over the slow progress of building up the ISF, there are fears that the presence of foreign forces is exacerbating the security situation and stoking the insurgency. While in Iraq we were told that in some areas there is no insurgent activity other than that provoked by the presence of foreign forces. This fact supports the case for withdrawal from these areas, as does the argument that by remaining in Iraq, foreign forces 308 HC Deb, 13 March 2006, cols 1151–1152 309 “UK troop numbers to fall by 800”, BBC News Online, 13 March 2006, news.bbc.co.uk 310 Foreign & Commonwealth Office, Sixth Report of the Foreign Affairs Committee; Session 2004–05; Foreign Policy Aspects of the War Against Terrorism; Response of the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, Cm 6590, June 2005 311 Ministry of Defence, “Defence Secretary: Security Handover in Muthanna is a 'significant milestone' for all Iraqis”, 19 June 2006 312 “Japan to pull troops out of Iraq”, BBC Online, 20 June 2006, news.bbc.co.uk 92 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism are simply making themselves a target for insurgents. Moreover, withdrawal need not be total; for example, a force could remain to protect oil installations. However, there are also concerns that the country could collapse into civil war in the event that foreign forces withdraw too soon. Kenneth Pollack of the Brookings Institution think-tank recently warned that if the US pulled out precipitately the Iraqi state would collapse very quickly. “Civil war has already begun in Iraq. Our presence is simply keeping it simmering at a low level”.313 243. We asked our witnesses whether they thought that it might be possible for the multinational forces to withdraw from relatively quiet areas. Yahia Said was pessimistic about this: If you had asked me this question about a month or two months ago, I would have definitely answered that it is necessary to get into an accelerated timetable for withdrawal and that a lot of the multinational forces’ actions are causing more harm than good. However, the situation is very dynamic now in Iraq. There have been significant changes over the last few months and especially since the attack on Samarra, and, with an impeding threat of sectarian civil war, there is a clear case for a multinational force to protect civilians and to prevent a slide into civil war. 314 Yahia Said added a stark warning about early withdrawal: Just to give you a comparison of the situation in Iraq today, think of Iraq today as the early days of the war in Bosnia. Do you really want to leave? That is when everybody was calling for the international community to intervene, to stop the bloodshed. It is a situation similar in other ways. This is sectarian bloodshed that is being heralded through free elections. The war in Yugoslavia started after a set of free elections and referenda that brought nationalists to power. We are facing very similar dilemmas.315 Zaki Chehab also opposed the early withdrawal of multilateral forces. He told us: “If you withdraw, you are just handing a victory to al Qaeda and militancy and all these elements.”316 Many of the people we met in Iraq were also insistent that any quick withdrawal could be harmful. 244. Nevertheless, there could be some merit in setting out a timetable for withdrawal. Yahia Said told us: I still think there is a benefit from having a timetable for withdrawal, albeit an extended one. That is because a big part of the violence in Iraq and a big irritant in Iraq is a suspicion that the forces are there to stay, that Iraq will never be free. So the timetable will offer a signal to Iraqis that these forces will leave as soon as the situation stabilises. 317 313 “Bush calls for restraint as fears of civil war rise”, Financial Times, 23 February 2006 314 Q 267 [Mr Said] 315 Q 284 [Mr Said] 316 Q 281 [Mr Chehab] 317 Q 267 [Mr Said] Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 93 However, we heard strongly expressed alternative views during our visit to Iraq: we were told by senior Iraqi political figures that setting a timetable for withdrawal would send out all the wrong signals and that withdrawal should be tied to the achievement of various political and security milestones. 245. We recommend that the Government set out in its response to this Report the circumstances under which it would withdraw British forces from Iraq. We further recommend that the Government set out in its response to this Report the findings of the ‘joint committee to transfer security responsibility’. Detainees 246. Concern remains over the number of detainees held by coalition forces. Jack Straw told us about the detainees: There is obviously a quantitative difference; the Americans have 14,000 in detention and we have 40 or so... There are discussions taking place at the moment between the Americans and the Iraqis about the future of these detainees but… it should not be assumed that there is unanimity amongst either Iraqi politicians, or amongst the Iraqi public, about whether these people should be released. There are vocal calls always by some groups for the release of some detainees, but alongside that there will be very strong demands by other groups who may have been the victims of terrorism by a particular faction for these people to stay locked up.318 247. We conclude that, in the context of the insurgency and the appalling level of violence, detention will continue to be necessary; however, the level of such detentions is a problem for coalition forces too and for the United Kingdom’s image in the region. Wherever and whenever possible such detainees should be handed over to the Iraqi government for trial. We recommend that the Government set out in its response to this Report the current number and status of detainees held by the United Kingdom in Iraq, including the basis for their detention, as well as any plans to transfer them to Iraqi or US custody or to subject them to due judicial process. We also recommend that the Government provide in its response the latest information it has as to the number of detainees being held by the USA in Iraq and the number being held by the Iraqi authorities. Private military and security companies 248. There also remain concerns about the regulation of private military and security companies in Iraq and elsewhere. It has been estimated that there are now 20,000 private security personnel in Iraq.319 Our predecessor Committee noted concerns about the use of such firms.320 In July 2004, the Committee concluded that “the increase in the use of private military of security companies in Iraq and Afghanistan in the last two years has added to the case for regulation of these companies, where appropriate, by the British Government. 318 Q 224 319 “The enforcer”, The Guardian, 20 May 2006 320 HC (2003–04) 441–I, paras 27–31; and Foreign Affairs Committee, Ninth Report of Session 2001–02, Private Military Companies, HC 922 94 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism We recommend that the Government either bring forward legislation to introduce a regulatory regime for private military companies, or explain in full its reasons for not doing so.”321 The Government responded as follows: The Government agrees with the Committee that the growth in the size and importance of this industry strengthens the case for regulation of UK private military and security companies operating overseas. Developing such regulation is a complex undertaking, as set out in the Government’s Green Paper “Private Military Companies”, published on 12 February 2002. There are a number of difficult questions of definition in deciding how to approach such regulation. And the cost of regulation is potentially high, for both government and industry. Nonetheless, the Foreign Secretary has asked officials to undertake a further detailed review of options for regulation. The Government will keep the Committee fully informed of its thinking in this area.322 249. On 6 December 2005, Minister of State Ian Pearson wrote to the Committee about the status of the FCO’s review of policy on Private Military Security Companies: As announced to parliament in September 2004, the Foreign Secretary commissioned a detailed review of policy options for the regulation of Private Military and Security Companies. This was aimed at following up on the FCO’s Green Paper of 2002. The review focused on the complex issues of definition, regulation, and enforcement and was completed in June 2005. The Foreign Secretary is now discussing its recommendations with Ministerial colleagues. Parliament will be informed of any decision.323 250. We pursued the issue by writing to the FCO with a number of specific questions. In January 2006, the Government informed us about the rules of engagement for such firms. The operation of private security companies in Iraq is regulated by CPA Memorandum No 17; Annex A to CPA Memorandum No 17 sets out binding rules on the use of force which apply to all private security companies in Iraq.324 We also asked about the applicability of criminal law to: a) personnel working for companies under contract to provide security services to HMG in Iraq; (b) personnel working for British companies under contract to provide security services to other governments or to international bodies in Iraq; and (c) British citizens working for foreign companies under contract to provide security services to other governments or to international bodies in Iraq. The Government told us: In general, the criminal law of Iraq applies to crimes committed within the territory of Iraq and the application of this law is not affected by the nationality of the perpetrator or the identity of a person’s employer. Personnel employed by private security companies in Iraq may, however, enjoy immunity in some circumstances from the jurisdiction of the Iraqi courts. 321 HC (2003–04) 441–I, para 31 322 Foreign & Commonwealth Office, Seventh Report from the Foreign Affairs Committee; Session 2003–04; Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism; Response of the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, Cm 6340, September 2004 323 HC (2005–06) 574, Ev 67 324 Ev 101 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 95 Foreign nationals working in Iraq may in some cases remain subject to the criminal law of their state of nationality. The scope of application of such extra-territorial jurisdiction will depend on the legal system of each state. Category (a): Personnel employed by Control Risks Group and ArmorGroup in Iraq are notified to the Iraqi Government as members of the Administrative and Technical Staff of the British Embassy. This status means that they are entitled to immunity from the criminal jurisdiction of the Iraqi courts, although such immunity may be waived. The FCO is currently reviewing the conferral of this status on these personnel. Category (b): By virtue of CPA Order No 17 (Revised) (attached as Annex C), all non-Iraqi personnel working under contract in Iraq for (i) the MNF-I; (ii) a body engaged in humanitarian, development or reconstruction efforts; or (iii) any foreign diplomatic or consular mission are required to respect the laws of Iraq, except that they are not subject to Iraqi laws or regulations in matters relating to the terms and conditions of their contracts. Private Security Companies are however required to comply with any CPA legislation regulating the activities of such companies. Such contractors are immune from the jurisdiction of the Iraqi courts with respect to acts performed pursuant to the terms and conditions of their contract, but this immunity may be waived by the State that has employed the contractor. Iraqi nationals in categories (a) and (b) have no immunity. Category (c): The position of British citizens working for foreign companies under contract to provide security services to foreign diplomatic missions in Iraq or to international bodies engaged in humanitarian, development or reconstruction efforts is the same as for other non-Iraqi personnel in category (b). In addition, if a contractor of British nationality (in any category) were to commit a criminal offence in Iraq it is possible that in some circumstances he could be prosecuted in this country. This would depend on whether extra-territorial jurisdiction exists for the offence under English law. The CPS would assess whether to bring a prosecution in accordance with the normal requirements laid down in the Code for Crown prosecutors, ie whether there was a realistic prospect of a conviction and whether it was in the public interest to bring a prosecution here.325 251. The Government also provided the Committee with examples of the type of contract reached with companies providing security services to HMG in Iraq. Asked about how compliance by private companies is monitored, the Government told us: Day to day contract management is carried out by the Overseas Security Manager at Post overseen by the Deputy Head of Mission with support from FCO London (Iraq Policy Unit, Iraq Resource Management Unit, Security Management Directorate and Procurement Strategy Unit). 325 Ev 101–102 96 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism The Overseas Security Manager ensures that the Private Security Companies have the agreed number of staff on the ground, that they comply with FCO security procedures, that they maintain effectively FCO supplied security equipment, and that, in FCO parlance, they do not bring the FCO into disrepute. Any transgression of terms of contract would be flagged up by the Overseas Security Manager with senior managers of the contracted security companies at post, and if necessary disciplinary measures taken.326 252. We pursued the issue further with the previous Foreign Secretary in March 2006. He told us: I am glad you reminded me of this. I will pass on to business managers and others, should the Committee wish it, the concern of your Committee because I, too, wish to see legislation in hand and I have been working on this for the last two weeks. There is a discussion going on about the precise architecture for control. I frankly do not think this is too difficult an issue, because under the Security Industries Act (which I may say was mine when I was Home Secretary) there is the Security Industries Authority which has now got experience of regulating security cameras operating within the UK. Certainly my proposal is to have the same body do the regulation of British companies operating overseas, and indeed some of the ones who operate domestically also operate overseas and that is essentially to determine whether the companies are fit and proper people to operate. Then there is the issue of whether you license individual activities. You can do that, I think, at another adjunct to the arms control arrangements. So I do not think it is a difficult administrative or intellectual challenge, but as ever there is always a queue.327 253. We conclude that the Government is making slow progress towards resolving the issue of how to regulate private military and security companies. This is regrettable given the increase in the use of such firms in Iraq and elsewhere. We recommend that the Government accelerate its efforts in this area and that it set out in its response to this Report what measures it plans to take. Political developments Further political milestones 254. Previous Reports in this inquiry discussed political developments in Iraq. These included the writing of the Transitional Administrative Law (TAL), the formation of the Interim Government, and the holding of free and fair elections in January 2005.328 Since the last Report, several important political milestones have been passed in Iraq. 255. On 15 October 2005, Iraqis voted in favour of the country’s new constitution in a nation-wide referendum. The UN endorsed the voting process: most people were able to vote and there was high voter turnout in many areas. Speaking on 16 October 2005, the former Foreign Secretary welcomed the vote: “The referendum yesterday in Iraq is very 326 Ev 102 327 Q 226 328 HC (2004–05) 36–I, paras 144–149 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 97 good news for all Iraqis. Over sixty per cent voted, six thousand three hundred polling stations were opened almost all on time and the whole process took place in remarkable calm given the overall security situation in Iraq. What this referendum shows is the hunger of Iraqis to exercise the same rights that all the rest of us have, democratic rights, and to defy the terrorists.”329 256. On 15 December 2005, Iraqis went to the polling stations once again to vote in parliamentary elections. The results, which were not announced until late January 2006, showed that the Shia-led United Iraqi Alliance took 128 of the 275 seats, ten short of an outright majority. Kurdish parties won 53 seats and the main Sunni Arab bloc 44.330 However, the elections were followed by four months of political deadlock, which was not broken until 22 April, when President Talabani asked Shia compromise candidate Nouri Maliki to form a new government. It then took a further month before agreement was reached on the composition of that government and its endorsement by Parliament and it was not until the beginning of June that agreement was reached on the posts of Interior and Defence Minister. The new Iraqi government faces a daunting challenge. In addition to security concerns, it will have to work to increase the inclusion of the Sunni community, oversee revisions to the constitution and work to maintain the territorial integrity of the country amid ongoing concerns over its fragmentation. 257. When he met with us in October 2005, the former Foreign Secretary was optimistic about the political process: You could come up with a catalogue of bad news but what you are omitting in all of this is the most important message of all this year, 2005, which is this: the Iraqis have embraced democracy. People said we did not understand the nature of Iraqi society, meaning that we did not understand that they did not really want to be democrats; that they did not have any interest and they just wanted to be dominated by tyrants. Well, eight and a half million Iraqis proved those people wrong on 30 January, and 10 million proved them wrong again on 15 October. The Iraqis want what we take for granted, which is the right to run their own affairs; and it is called democracy.331 However, speaking to us more recently, Jack Straw was clearly frustrated by the political deadlock in Iraq: The vast majority of people in the country are showing faith in democracy. The only problem is that they do have this tendency to do things at the last minute and certainly for us in the British system, where we are used to governments being formed in the space of 24 or 48 hours, it is very odd. Anyway, we have got to stick with it. Of course, I agree with you that it is this vacuum in terms of governance which is certainly making much else in the country more difficult.332 258. Our witnesses were also deeply frustrated by the political deadlock. Yahia Said told us: 329 Remarks by the Foreign Secretary, 16 October 2005, available at: www.fco.gov.uk 330 “Iraqi Shias win election victory”, BBC News Online, 21 January 2006, news.bbc.co.uk 331 Q 77 [Mr Straw] 332 Q 223 [Mr Straw] 98 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism The Iraqi political process has strayed off the right track quite a while ago. It is impossible to sit back and allow these Iraqis to work at their problems together. I must caveat that. The outbursts of violence do every now and then shock Iraqi politicians into some responsible action but even then, most recently, the events in the so-called mosque where US military forces attacked a certain militia in Baghdad, the response of the Iraqi politicians is to boycott the government forming negotiations. The country is burning and they get upset with the Americans and punish the Iraqi people. Clearly we have a problem with the Iraqi political classes. 333 259. In the last Report in this inquiry, the Committee concluded: We conclude that it is essential that the international community, and especially the US and United Kingdom, refrain from interfering in Iraqi politics and decision making. Nevertheless, there is an important role for the international community in Iraq. We recommend that the Government do all it can to facilitate the UN’s role in Iraq, both in terms of providing security assistance in Iraq and through support in the Security Council.334 260. This remains true. It also remains the case that the UN is playing a critical role in Iraq, but that it is hindered by the security situation. We heard both in New York and in Iraq about the problems the UN has encountered trying to obtain dedicated air assets in order to assist its work. On 13 June 2006, the Foreign Secretary told us about the possibility that the EU will increase its level of involvement in Iraq: “[O]ne of the other people who came to the Council in Luxembourg yesterday was indeed the new Iraqi Foreign Minister… He was giving the Council an update on the position in Iraq. He was also seeking an expanding role for the European Union… and support from Member States in the UN in order to assist… economic reforms and security reforms… and there seems to me to be quite a warm response to that.”335 261. We commend the continued commitment of ordinary Iraqis to the democratic process in Iraq and are impressed by the obvious desire on the part of ordinary Iraqis to achieve a more representative political system. We reiterate the conclusion of our predecessor Committee that it is essential that the international community, and especially the USA and United Kingdom, refrain from interfering in Iraqi politics and decision making. Nevertheless, there is an important continuing role for the international community in support of the democratic government in Iraq. We recommend that the Government do all it can to facilitate the UN’s role in Iraq, both in terms of providing security assistance in Iraq and through support in the Security Council. We recommend that the Government set out in its response to this Report what progress has been made on providing security to the UN in Iraq and what plans there are to facilitate a greater UN presence. We further recommend that the Government set out in its response to this Report the progress made in establishing EU assistance to Iraq. 333 Q 280 [Mr Said] 334 HC (2004–05) 36–I, para 168 335 Evidence from Foreign Secretary Margaret Beckett to the Inquiry into Developments in the European Union, to be published as HC 768–iv Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 99 Iranian influence 262. We discuss elsewhere Iran’s links with the insurgency in Iraq as well as its links with terrorism more broadly.336 There are also concerns about Iran’s political influence over Iraq. Yahia Said told us: “Iran has a very big footprint in Iraq, a big influence. It goes through a variety of channels. It has channels to a variety of the actors in Iraq.” 337 We heard about these concerns during our visit to Iraq. For example we were told that some elements of the Iraqi Security Forces and in particular the police in the south are proIranian, but that the extent of this sympathy is unclear. 263. When he gave evidence to us in March 2006, the former Foreign Secretary downplayed these concerns: “First of all, there is bound to be a natural association between the Shia in Iran and the Shia in Iraq, although it does not mean that the Shia in Iraq are in the pocket of the Iranians.”338 Moreover: “It is entirely legitimate for Iran to take an interest in its neighbour Iraq. It is not legitimate for it to interfere with it, but if it was our neighbour we would be taking an interest in it.”339 Mr Straw also reassured the Committee that: “[T]here is not seen to be any particular appetite amongst Iraqis for setting up a structure similar to that in Iran. Although it is true that the majority of Iranians are Shia, and in the south and other parts of Iraq a significant proportion of the Iraqis are Shia, the Iraqis are Arab and the Iranians are not Arab, they are Persian.”340 264. Reflecting how seriously the USA is taking this issue, on 17 March 2006 US Ambassador to Iraq Zalmay Khalilzad announced that back-channel discussions were under way with Iran on resuming the direct talks about Iraq that broke off shortly after the 2003 war. Khalilzad described the proposed talks as a chance to express concerns about Iran’s policy in Iraq.341 However, efforts to initiate talks subsequently stalled with Iraqi progress towards forming a government and the decision by the Iranian president to call off the talks. 265. We conclude that concerns over Iranian involvement in Iraq reinforce the need for dialogue and engagement with Tehran. We recommend that the Government engage with both its Iranian and Iraqi counterparts to ease concerns in this area and that it work to encourage Washington to take a similar approach. We further conclude that serious concerns exist over Iranian involvement in Iraq and that the organisation, weaponry and technology for a number of terrorist incidents in Iraq have emanated from within Iran. Reconstruction and economic development 266. Previous reports in this inquiry have discussed the importance of improving the socio-economic situation of Iraqis in order to give them a stake in the new Iraq and to 336 See paras 347–351 337 Q 270 [Mr Said] 338 Q 229 [Mr Straw] 339 Q 230 [Mr Straw] 340 Q 81 [Mr Straw] 341 “US, Iran Closer to Talks on Iraq”, The Washington Post, 18 March, 2006 100 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism deprive the insurgents of recruits.342 The last Report concluded that “the slow pace of reconstruction and the failure significantly to improve the quality of life for many Iraqis may have played a role in fuelling the insurgency by providing a pool of willing recruits… [I]t is essential that greater progress is made towards improving basic services in Iraq and increasing employment opportunities so that Iraqis may see a material improvement in the quality of their lives.”343 In its response to that Report, the Government told us: “The Government agrees that the provision of essential services is not yet satisfactory, and that unemployment remains a significant problem. Realistically, it is likely to take years rather than months to put right two decades of under investment in Iraq’s infrastructure and the damage caused by sabotage and looting.”344 267. Three years after the war in Iraq, there remains broad disappointment at the results of reconstruction efforts. According to local government officials, hundreds of schools, public buildings, hospitals, universities and shops are still in desperate need of repair, with less than 35% of projected reconstruction achieved to date. Meanwhile, Iraqis lament the fact that the country’s essential infrastructure—water and power facilities—remains in tatters. The lack of basic services remains a source of great bitterness.345 268. Coalition officials emphasise the extremely difficult conditions in Iraq. In February 2006, US officials said the reconstruction of Iraq was being undermined by continuing insurgent attacks and was now expected to cost more than the US$56 billion initially projected. According to some estimates, more than 25% of all reconstruction funds have been diverted to security-related issues. 346 During its visit to Iraq in January 2006, the Committee heard that the security situation had considerably increased the cost of reconstruction. However, there is also ample evidence of mismanagement, fraud and incompetence in the reconstruction effort. In February 2006, Robert Stein, who held a senior position in the Coalition Provisional Authority, admitted in a Washington court to stealing more than US$2 million, as well as taking bribes in return for contracts. Around US$1 billion is also believed to have been stolen by Iraqi Defence Ministry officials.347 Yahia Said told us about the problem of corruption: The amount of cash that was pumped into the Iraqi economy after the drought of the sanctions was immense. Tens of billions of dollars poured onto Iraqi streets immediately after the invasion. Of course, that is a great motivation for corruption. It creates great incentives and conditions for corruption and it has contributed to the exacerbation of conditions of corruption. Again, the solution here lies at the political and policy level. You need robust Iraqi institutions to design and decide what projects to follow.348 342 HC (2004–05) 36–I, paras 118–122 343 HC (2004–05) 36–I, para 122 344 Foreign & Commonwealth Office, Sixth Report of the Foreign Affairs Committee; Session 2004–05; Foreign Policy Aspects of the War Against Terrorism; Response of the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, Cm 6590, June 2005 345 “Iraq: Insecurity, corruption hamper reconstruction effort”, Reuters, 20 March 2006 346 Ibid 347 Ibid 348 Q 287 [Mr Said] Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 101 269. While accepting there has been a degree of progress on reconstruction, Iraqi officials also point out that many reconstruction projects have been cancelled. According to Ahmed Kubba, a senior official in the Ministry of Reconstruction and Development: “A list of 6,000 infrastructure projects that needed to be tackled after the war in 2003 was presented and approved by the US government, focussing on health care and education… Of this number, less than 2,000 have been completed so far, with most being cancelled due to financial problems.” Kubba went on to point out that only 300 out of 475 initial electricity projects would be completed due to a lack of investment. This means that only 2,200 megawatts of additional power will be delivered instead of the 3,400 megawatts originally planned for by the US government.349 During its visit to Iraq, the Committee heard that some of the country’s infrastructure is now in worse shape than it was three years ago. 270. International Development Secretary Hilary Benn, who visited Iraq in March 2006 to open a DFID-funded centre to train water engineers, has highlighted the progress made in Iraq: “I think one has to recognise the progress that has been made three years on… Iraq now has a stable currency, it’s reduced its debt, schools and hospitals are functioning and more people have clean water and access to sanitation than was the case, certainly in the 1990s when the system collapsed completely.” The International Development Secretary also highlighted the progress of vaccination programmes, which have led to a decline of measles, mumps, polio and rubella.350 271. In contrast, Oliver Birch, the head of the Christian Aid programme in Iraq, has said that reconstruction has stalled and conditions in the country do not appear to be improving: “Quality of life indicators in most sectors are no higher than, or even below, the sanctions period just before the coalition invaded in 2003”. These indicators included infant mortality, malnutrition and water supply. Birch added that in some areas “local and probably national government were widely affected by corruption… [and this is] probably by a greater extent even than in the Baathist time”.351 272. We asked our witnesses about the failure to make more progress on reconstruction. Yahia Said told us: There were several problems with the drive to invest massively in Iraq from day one. First of all, a lot of the projects that were designed and had money spent on them were long term projects which should have been left to the Iraqis to decide about. There have been some silly decisions made about things. For example, much of the power generating capacity was designed to work on natural gas which is environmentally correct, but it is a fuel that is not available in Iraq. Some of the new power stations now rely on imported fuel. These are the nicest power stations you can have and probably in the future Iraq would have benefited from them but they are not providing immediate relief. Generally, most of the large, big ticket projects did not produce immediate relief to Iraqis… A lot of the aid should be targeted at policy and at helping Iraqis develop policies for the development of their economy, for dealing with immediate needs, rather than investing in large, big ticket projects. 349 “Iraq: Insecurity, corruption hamper reconstruction effort”, Reuters, 20 March 2006 350 “Iraq reconstruction ‘has stalled’”, BBC News Online, 21 March 2006, news.bbc.co.uk 351 Ibid 102 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism After all, Iraq has a lot of its own resources. The Central Bank of Iraq has $10 billion in its coffers. Iraq is not necessarily a capital deficient country. What Iraq needs is a smarter investment and development policy. Again, it brings us back to the political process. It requires a political process that will manage the country’s resources in a more efficient, equitable, transparent way.352 The importance of getting the political side in order was reiterated to us during our visit to Iraq; the key to successful reconstruction is achieving a stable and competent government, with the best people in the key jobs. 273. The former Foreign Secretary wrote to update us on British support for reconstruction efforts in the south of Iraq: In Southern Iraq more widely the Department for International Development (DfID) has committed £131 million for infrastructure rehabilitation, of which £53 million has been spent on employment creation and improving local administration, along with a £40 million project for improved power and water supplies in southern Iraq. The power and water project will also help central government design an effective long-term infrastructure strategy. A Governance Development Fund provides project funding for work enabling Iraqi capacity building to take place. We also co-chair, with the United Nations, the Southern Iraq Donor Group, which aims to bring all the major civilian and military agencies together to better co-ordinate and deliver our response to reconstruction and development in Southern Iraq.353 274. During our visit to Iraq we heard about the progress that has been made on reconstruction in the south of the country. The power supply in the south is better than that in much of the country, and living standards in the region are among the best in Iraq. Basra remains the main problem in the region, but it is slowly moving into a post-conflict phase and expectations are starting to rise. We heard that there is little sabotage of the power infrastructure in the south compared with other areas, but corruption and smuggling are huge problems. We also heard that the USA is considering introducing Provincial Reconstruction Teams (PRTs) to Iraq based on the model in Afghanistan and of the possibility that the United Kingdom might take the lead in several of these. The conflation of security and reconstruction in PRTs in Afghanistan has caused concern, not least among aid agencies. 275. We conclude that the reconstruction process has been made extremely difficult by the insurgency, both by sabotage and by the level of violence to personnel involved; however, the lack of progress risks dissatisfaction with the political process. We recommend that the Government set out in its response to this Report its plans to make reconstruction efforts more effective as well as its plans, if any, to take part in setting up Provincial Reconstruction Teams in Iraq. 352 Q 286 [Mr Said] 353 Ev 36 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 103 Diplomatic representation 276. In the last Report in this inquiry, our predecessor Committee outlined the status of British diplomatic representation in Iraq and the great difficulties endured by personnel serving in the country. In that Report, the Committee concluded that: “the effectiveness of the United Kingdom’s Embassy and Consulates-General is hindered by the limits on movement imposed by security considerations, but that the security of personnel is paramount. There are also issues of continuity given the short postings of many of those in Iraq.”354 In its response, the Government told us: Travel outside the International Zone in Baghdad remains dangerous and is subject to tight security constraints. Nonetheless, staff are able to travel outside the Zone to meet Iraqi contacts and carry out diplomatic work. Staff in the two ConsulatesGeneral are also able to travel within their respective regions in order to deliver HMG policy objectives. The maximum length of postings to Iraq is one year. This reflects the particular stresses of operating with high levels of security. This inevitably leads to a higher turnover of staff than in normal posts, but the Government aims to maintain continuity of policy and approach by ensuring that staff are thoroughly briefed before taking up their posts, and that arrivals and departures are well coordinated. A number of staff have returned to London to work on Iraq, contributing to continuity in the broader sense. As the security of our staff is paramount, the Government keeps staff numbers under constant review in order to ensure that only essential staff are kept in country. The Government also reviews and changes the structure of our staffing to reflect the evolving political situation and the character and objectives of our diplomatic presence in Iraq. Such changes are necessary to ensure that our diplomatic representation is appropriate and effective.355 277. Since that report, there has been no improvement in the difficult operating environment for British staff. During our visit to Iraq, we witnessed the current conditions. Baghdad is now the biggest UK diplomatic mission in the Middle East; there are 300 personnel in Baghdad and 250 in Basra. All these personnel are volunteers, many are unmarried and ‘first-posters’. We also heard that there is a strong team-spirit and high levels of motivation. The longest tour is 12 months and the minimum is 6 months, so there is a high turnover of people; the minimum gap between tours is 6 months. Personnel officially work a 5½-day week, but most also work on their days off. After 6 weeks in post staff receive ten days’ special leave. 278. Facilities have improved greatly over the past year and further improvements are planned. This is very important, as most staff are unable to leave the international zone for weeks at a time. The international zone receives less incoming fire than in the past, but there are incidents each week. Hardened accommodation has now been provided for all staff. The Basra compound is smaller and personnel are more restricted in their movements. It is hoped that the number of personnel in Basra will increase with the opening of a trade office. 354 HC (2004–05) 36–I, para 172 355 Foreign & Commonwealth Office, Sixth Report of the Foreign Affairs Committee; Session 2004–05; Foreign Policy Aspects of the War Against Terrorism; Response of the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, Cm 6590, June 2005 104 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 279. We conclude that conditions remain extremely difficult for British personnel in Iraq and commend the good work they are doing in testing circumstances. We recommend that the Government update us in its response to this Report on the number of British personnel in Iraq, their location and its plans to improve facilities further. Relations in Basra 280. For a long time the situation in Basra, where the United Kingdom has responsibility, was enviably calm. However, since the last Report in this inquiry, the security situation in Basra has become much more challenging and relations with the local authorities have come under strain. This deterioration has taken place amid rising sectarian divisions, growing tensions among different Shia groups vying for political power and the proliferation of criminal gangs, which have been blamed for a wave of kidnappings and murders.356 281. In 2005, the use by insurgents of new, more lethal roadside bombs forced British troops to scale down their patrols and alter their mode of transport, with journeys undertaken by helicopter rather than road if possible.357 We discuss suspicions of Iranian links with the increased threat in Chapter 7. A number of incidents have also sparked tension with local communities. In September 2005, two undercover British soldiers were detained by the Iraqis. On 19 September, a British force freed the two men from prison in central Basra, damaging the police station and injuring several Iraqis. The incident led to a serious deterioration in relations between British forces and the local authorities, with local police commanders and provincial council members refusing to work with the British.358 282. On 22 November 2005, the former Foreign Secretary wrote to us about the situation: During my visit to Basra, on 11 November, I was able to meet the Deputy Governor and to see first hand that relations with the local authorities have improved since the events of 19 September. The joint UK/Iraq statement of 11 October, expressing regret that the incident took place and for the casualties on both sides and damage to public facilities, forms part of the wider efforts to restore good working relations with the Iraqi authorities in Basra. Present at my meetings in order to continue support for the Iraqi political process in Basra—were senior members of Basra Provincial Council, and a cross-section of local civil society (including Shi’i and Sunni tribal leaders). All my interlocutors emphasised the need for greater consultation with the UK presence in Basra. During my visit, I called on the Basra Provincial Council to condemn those groups mounting attacks on MND(SE) and to ensure local security forces took effective action against them. This will help remove the major obstacle to an acceleration of reconstruction and the strengthening of co-operation… 356 “Iraq imposes emergency in Basra”, BBC News Online, 31 May 2006, news.bbc.co.uk 357 “Shaped bombs magnify Iraq attacks”, BBC News Online, 10 October 2005, news.bbc.co.uk 358 “UK agrees to pay for Basra damage”, BBC News Online, 11 October 2005, news.bbc.co.uk Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 105 Our staff—at the British Consulate General in Basra—have been hard at work ensuring greater Council involvement in reconstruction projects, security issues, and assistance for education and culture in Basra. We are, therefore, now currently on much better terms with the Governor and Council, and co-operation in all areas is proceeding as well as expected given the continuing fragile security situation. Our Consul General, James Tansley, now addresses weekly meetings of the Council and regularly discusses security issues with the Governor. We aim to continue this engagement to ensure that the legacy of our presence in Basra will create further renewal of the region.359 283. Regrettably, relations have continued to come under strain in 2006, with a series of flare-ups. The arrest of several Iraqi security officials suspected of conspiring with militia led to a boycott by the Basra authorities of cooperation with the British army. During our visit to Basra in January 2006, Members of this Committee found that the situation was again going through a difficult period and contacts with the British authorities had been broken off by the Governor and some Members of the Provincial Council. 284. The visit by Foreign Office Minister Kim Howells to Basra in March 2006 went some way to improve relations, as David Richmond CMG, Director-General, Defence and Intelligence at the FCO told us: “the visit of Dr Howells has helped considerably, and I think there are signs that we are now getting back to normal in terms of the relationship with the Provincial Council and some signs of getting back to normal with the Governor as well, though he is more difficult.”360 285. However, on 6 May, the crash of a British military helicopter in which five British personnel were killed, led to clashes between British troops and Iraqi youths.361 More positively, Iraqi police supported British soldiers during the unrest that followed the crash and the Iraqi authorities agreed to formally resume cooperation with the British Army in the aftermath.362 On 17 May 2006, Foreign Secretary Margaret Beckett told the House that the Chairman of the Basra Provincial Council had announced a formal end to the boycott. She added “This welcome development opens the way to restoration of full co-operation between us and the Basra local authorities.”363 The situation in Basra remains tense; at the end of May, Prime Minister Maliki declared a month-long state of emergency in an effort to tackle the rise in sectarian clashes and factional rivalry.364 286. We conclude that the deterioration in the security situation and the continuing difficulties in relations with the local communities in Basra are deeply worrying. We commend efforts that have been made to build bridges and repair relations. We recommend that the Government set out in its response to this Report what further steps it is taking to improve the situation in the four south-eastern provinces of Iraq and to bring about a resolution of the differences between Shia groups. 359 Ev 36 360 Q 228 [Mr Richmond] 361 “Basra assault compounds PM’s problems”, Financial Times, 8 May 2006 362 “Iraqis resume ties with British”, BBC News Online, 7 May 2006, news.bbc.co.uk 363 HC Deb, 17 May 2006, col 995W 364 “Iraq imposes emergency in Basra”, BBC News Online, 31 May 2006, news.bbc.co.uk 106 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism The decision to go to war in Iraq 287. In April 2006, we heard from several witnesses about the Government’s decision to go to war in Iraq. Asked when he believed the Prime Minister made a commitment to go to war in Iraq, Professor Philippe Sands QC told the Committee: My personal view is that the Prime Minister took a decision very early on, in March/April 2002, to provide unambiguous support to President Bush and that President Bush had decided at that time to remove Saddam Hussein from office, irrespective of what did or did not emerge. In terms of proof—and as a lawyer, as an English barrister obviously one is very careful in answering your question—I would say that certainly by 31 January 2003 the Prime Minister had taken his personal decision to support President Bush’s decision to remove Saddam Hussein from office. I refer to that date because that is a date from a memorandum that I have referred to later in the book, at pages 272 and 273, relating to a private conversation between the President and the Prime Minister at the White House, accompanied by a small number of other individuals, at which President Bush unequivocally states that he has decided to use force, and the Prime Minister unequivocally states, “I am solidly with you.” And in my view everything that happened thereafter, including the UN process, the views of the weapons inspectors, did not really matter what it turned up because the decision had been taken and the start date for war had already been pencilled in.365 288. If true, this would raise questions about the Prime Minister’s comments to Parliament on 18 March 2003.366 Asked directly whether he thought the Prime Minister deliberately misled the House in his speech on 18 March 2003, Sir Christopher Meyer, who was British Ambassador to Washington from 1997 until the Spring of 2003, said: “Absolutely not.”367 289. Sir Christopher did not attend the meeting that produced the minute cited by Philippe Sands.368 Asked to comment on the minute of that meeting, Sir Christopher told us: By the time that Tony Blair came to the meeting on 31 January I was saying that, absent a coup in Iraq or Saddam suddenly deciding to go off into exile in some hospitable place like Minsk, the die was cast for war and therefore the Prime Minister’s main objective for that meeting should be to ensure that in the coming war we went into battle, if you like, in the best company possible, which is another way of saying, “Let us get a second resolution.”369 Sir Christopher expanded on the Prime Minister’s commitment to stand with the USA in any war against Iraq: I think Tony Blair had made a decision to support George Bush, however the cards fell, from the Crawford Summit of April 2002. This is a distinction I make in my 365 Q 289 366 HC Deb, 18 March 2003, cols 760–764 367 Q 337 368 Q 328 369 Q 329 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 107 book. This was not a decision in April 2002 at Crawford to go to war on such-andsuch a date. It was not an operational decision, but Blair had decided that the right thing to do, given his own view of Saddam Hussein, was to be with the President of the United States whatever decision he chose to take. That was a decision by Blair, I think, taken to try to ensure that he had the maximum influence possible over the President. This is a very important distinction because the criticism has been levelled at both President Bush and Prime Minister Blair that from a very early stage in 2002 they had decided, come what may, that they were going to go to war against Saddam Hussein in the spring of 2003. I do not think that is true because the consequence of that is that everything that then followed in 2002, including the efforts of the United Nations, would have been simply a smokescreen for a devious plan, if you like. I do not believe that to be true. I do not believe the two leaders lied to their respective public opinions. I do believe though that they were very doubtful that Saddam would ever do the right thing and that probably it would come to war, but we did not get to the moment of truth until early 2003.370 290. Sir Christopher went on to say: “I do not know exactly what transpired between President and Prime Minister, but the speech that the Prime Minister made the next day at College Station, which was one of the best speeches he made on Iraq, sounded to me like a statement of very strong support for the President, whatever he chose to do.”371 291. We conclude that there remain significant disagreements about the timing of the decision to go to war with Iraq. We recommend that the Government set out in its response to this Report the chronology of when decisions were made with regard to the Iraq war, including publication of the memorandum of the conversation between the Prime Minister and President Bush on 31 January 2004. 370 Q 330 371 Q 331 108 7 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism Iran Background 292. Iran is a country of major geo-strategic significance and political, economic and energy importance. It poses a serious foreign policy challenge to the United Kingdom and its allies. In addition to the question of how to deter Iran from developing nuclear weapons, there is Iran’s mixed record of involvement in the ‘war against terrorism’ and its poor human rights record. Iran’s role is made more complicated by the interplay of rhetoric and pragmatism and the complex interplay of political and clerical systems of governance. In our many discussions about the situation in Iran, we met with British officials, members of the IAEA secretariat, including Director General Dr Mohammed ElBaradei, members of the US Administration and with Iranian politicians. 293. On the nuclear issue, former Foreign Secretary Jack Straw told us about the effort that has been put into negotiations with Iran: “I would not have spent more time and effort on the Iran dossier than any other since the Iraq war were I not deeply concerned about this threat and the threat that it poses to international peace and security.”372 Explaining why the prospect of an Iranian nuclear weapon is so undesirable, the Foreign Secretary told us: [T]he worst way of achieving peace and security in the Middle East is to have Iran developing a nuclear weapon, or leading to that suspicion, because that will then lead to other states in the region almost certainly developing their own nuclear weapons. I cannot speak for them but I offer this speculation: some of the larger Arab states would not stand idly by for a second if they thought that Iran was developing a nuclear weapon.373 294. Expanding on the regional impact of an Iranian nuclear weapon, Dr John Chipman, director of the International Institute for Strategic Studies, warned: Were Iran to acquire a nuclear weapon, the status quo and the balance of power in the Gulf region would be altered. Israel has had nuclear weapons for decades. Yet this has not invited any strategic response in the region. Whatever their public pronouncements, Arab states privately recognise that Israel’s nuclear capacity is intended to preserve its existence and is not aimed at changing the regional balance of power. No regional state has sought nuclear weapons in response. Israel’s nuclear strength is seen as diplomatically offensive to the non-proliferation regime, and the west's implicit tolerance of it as a sign of double standards, but no one sees it as a strategic threat. In contrast, possession by Iran of nuclear weapons would change the balance of power and could threaten the regional status quo. The small Gulf Arab states would seek nuclear guarantees from the west, perhaps even closer affiliation to Nato. Saudi Arabia might reconsider its position and seek some kind of nuclear accord with Pakistan. Further afield, Egypt and Turkey might also think of going nuclear. Even if 372 Ev 195, Q 3 (Oral evidence taken before the Foreign Affairs Committee on 8 February 2006, HC (2005–06) 904–i) 373 Ibid, Ev 195, Q 2 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 109 all this took decades to play out, a nuclear-armed Iran would cause a strategic earthquake leading to all sorts of diplomatic and security realignments.374 295. In addition to broad concerns over regional nuclear proliferation, the nature of the regime in Tehran makes an Iranian nuclear weapon an alarming prospect. As Jack Straw told us: “If you were identifying countries who fitted the category of being undesirable candidates to hold nuclear weapons, Iran would be quite near the top of the list.”375 This is abundantly clear from Iran’s political support for and continued funding of terrorism as well as its call for the destruction of the state of Israel. 296. Iran provides a particularly difficult diplomatic challenge for the United Kingdom. There is a historic legacy of mistrust between the two countries, which have had only sporadic diplomatic relations since the 1979 Islamic Revolution. The United Kingdom’s criticism of the human rights situation in Iran as well as its leading role in the negotiations on the nuclear file put further strain on the relationship. Reflecting the poor state of relations, on 16 October 2005, Iranian officials accused the United Kingdom of involvement in two explosions in Ahvaz near the Iraqi border (this was not the first time such claims had been made); the British Embassy in Tehran condemned the attacks and rejected allegations of British involvement.376 Reflecting these tensions, as well as the strength of anti-British sentiment among the Iranian population, the British embassy has been the target of attacks and protests in recent years.377 Nuclear standoff 297. In the last Report in this inquiry, our predecessor Committee outlined the nonproliferation situation in Iran. The Report noted the reasons for international concern over Iran’s nuclear ambitions, progress of the International Atomic Energy Agency’s (IAEA) investigations into the Iranian nuclear programme as well as the negotiations between Iran and the EU3 (France, Germany and the United Kingdom).378 Iran’s nuclear programme 298. Iran has consistently denied that it is developing nuclear weapons, insisting that the goal of its nuclear programme is to produce electricity. Tehran vigorously defends its right to a civil nuclear programme, and this has become a potent national rallying point. Asked about the Iranian nuclear weapons programme, former Foreign Secretary Jack Straw told us: The evidence is circumstantial. I have never said that it is categorical and I will not unless and until it is categorical, but let me just summarise the evidence. First of all, it is 20 years of basic deception of the IAEA in breach of their treaty obligations, saying that they were not doing anything significant in respect of the fuel cycle when they 374 “An effective way to deal with Iran”, Financial Times, 15 March 2006 375 Ev 196, Q 10 (Oral evidence taken before the Foreign Affairs Committee on 8 February 2006, HC (2005–06) 904–i) 376 “Britain denies bomb claim”, BBC News Online, 16 October 2005, news.bbc.co.uk 377 “Tehran students attack UK embassy”, BBC News Online, 28 September 2006, news.bbc.co.uk 378 HC (2004–05) 36-I, paras 363–373 110 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism were building these very large plants at Natanz and Isfahan. Then the fact that, as it emerged, they have been experimenting with plutonium and polonium, which are not really of much use when it comes to generating electricity by nuclear means. There is the discovery by the IAEA inspectors, which they have yet properly to explain, of a significant manual from AQ Khan, the nuclear proliferator, about the design and manufacture of depleted uranium hemispheres, which have a purpose only in nuclear bombs and not in nuclear power stations. And the fact that they are developing the Shehab-3 missile system and analysts suggest that this could be used with a nuclear warhead.379 299. Dr ElBaradei’s report for the March 2006 meeting of the IAEA Governing Board included an assessment of the situation: Although the Agency has not seen any diversion of nuclear material to nuclear weapons or other nuclear explosive devices, the Agency is not at this point in time in a position to conclude that there are no undeclared nuclear materials or activities in Iran. The process of drawing such a conclusion, under normal circumstances, is a time consuming process even with an Additional Protocol in force. In the case of Iran, this conclusion can be expected to take even longer in light of the undeclared nature of Iran’s past nuclear programme, and in particular because of the inadequacy of information available on its centrifuge enrichment programme, the existence of a generic document related to the fabrication of nuclear weapon components, and the lack of clarification about the role of the military in Iran’s nuclear programme.380 300. Under the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), Iran has the right to pursue elements of the nuclear fuel cycle for civilian purposes, as long as this is declared and subject to international monitoring. As the former Foreign Secretary told us: Iran has signed up solemnly to the Non-Proliferation Treaty and as a non-nuclear weapons state they have rights to develop nuclear power under Article IV but they have obligations not to do anything in the way in which they develop a nuclear power capability which could lead to the development of a nuclear weapons capability. Let me make this clear—I have made it clear time and time again—Iran has every right to nuclear power stations.381 301. The fear is that Iran will ‘break out’ of the NPT once it is capable of building nuclear weapons: the NPT allows signatories to withdraw as long as they give the IAEA 90 days notice. There are diverse estimates of how long it would take Iran to acquire a nuclear weapon. According to an assessment by the International Institute for Strategic Studies, Iran is still five to ten years from producing a nuclear weapon. However, “if it continues its research activities on uranium enrichment it may be able within months to master the techniques for operating a cascade of centrifuges. Once it has this capability it could install cascades at clandestine facilities and work to produce fissile material for a weapon.”382 On 2 379 Q 199 380 “Implementation of the NPT Safeguards Agreement in the Islamic Republic of Iran”, Report by the Director General, 27 February 2006, GOV/2006/15 381 Ev 195, Q 2 (Oral evidence taken before the Foreign Affairs Committee on 8 February 2006, HC (2005–06) 904–i) 382 “An effective way to deal with Iran”, John Chipman, Director of the International Institute for Strategic Studies, Financial Times, 15 March 2006 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 111 June 2006, John Negroponte, director of US national intelligence, said that Iran could have nuclear weapons by 2010.383 302. Concerns about the pace of the Iranian programme increased recently with the announcement by President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on 11 April 2006 that Iran had joined “the nuclear countries of the world”. This followed news that Iran had enriched uranium.384 On 13 April, Iran declared to the IAEA that it had achieved an enrichment level of 3.6%; on 18 April, the IAEA took samples which confirmed this.385 The publication of satellite photographs of Iran’s Isfahan and Natanz plants showing evidence of new tunnels and underground facilities have added to concern, as has Tehran’s recent flexing of its missile technology.386 In April 2006, Iran unveiled new missile capabilities during a week of highly publicised military exercises in the Strait of Hormuz.387 A nuclear-armed Iran, equipped with long-range missiles, could be a dangerous force for instability in the region. 303. We conclude that there is clear cause for international concern over Iranian nuclear intentions and a number of substantive issues have yet to be resolved, as spelled out in successive IAEA reports. We further conclude that the Government is correct to take extremely seriously the possibility that Iran is seeking to acquire nuclear weapons. A nuclear armed Iran would radically alter the security geography of the region and would lead other countries to seek nuclear weapons or guarantees themselves. Diplomatic process 304. In the last Report in this inquiry, our predecessor Committee welcomed the deal reached in November 2004, whereby Iran agreed to suspend uranium enrichment in exchange for negotiation of a Trade and Co-operation Agreement with the EU.388 Since that Report, there has been a serious deterioration in the situation, with the breakdown of talks between the EU3 and Tehran, and Iran’s resumption of enrichment activities. 305. In August 2005, Iran re-opened its uranium conversion facility in Isfahan and resumed production of uranium hexafluoride, the feedstock for the enrichment process.389 In January 2006, Iran wrote to inform the IAEA that it had decided to resume research and development “on the peaceful nuclear energy programme.”390 Iran subsequently resumed enrichment activities. 306. The increasing seriousness of the situation is clear from deliberations at the IAEA. In September 2005, the IAEA Governing Board passed a resolution condemning Iran for 383 “World powers agree deal on Iran nuclear package”, Financial Times, 2 June 2006 384 “Iran nuclear move draws UN ire *Moscow warns against use of force to deal with Tehran”, Financial Times, 13 April 2006; and “Iran says it has mastered uranium enrichment”, Financial Times, 12 April 2006 385 “Nuclear report on Iran: Excerpts”, BBC News Online, 29 April 2006, news.bbc.co.uk 386 “US refuses to discuss Iran's nuclear plans in face-to-face talks on Iraq”, The Guardian, 18 April 2006 387 “Iran nuclear move draws UN ire”, Financial Times, 13 April 2006 388 HC (2004–05) 36–I, paras 363–373 389 “Implementation of the NPT Safeguards Agreement in the Islamic Republic of Iran and related Board resolutions”, IAEA Resolution adopted on 11 August 2005, GOV/2005/64 390 “Implementation of the NPT Safeguards Agreement in the Islamic Republic of Iran”, Report by the Director General, 27 February 2006, GOV/2006/15 112 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism “non-compliance” with the NPT. The resolution stated: “the history of concealment of Iran’s nuclear activities… [has] given rise to questions that are within the competence of the Security Council, as the organ bearing the main responsibility for the maintenance of international peace and security”.391 The Governing Board met again in November 2005 and considered a further report on Iran, but held back from reporting the country to the UN Security Council. This was in the context of a Russian compromise proposal and warnings to Iran that international patience was wearing thin.392 However, an extraordinary meeting of the IAEA Governing Board on 2–3 February 2006 agreed to report Iran to the UN Security Council, but delayed action until after its scheduled March meeting. This delay reflected an effort to maintain international consensus in the face of Chinese and Russian concerns over the potential for escalation.393 In March 2006, after months of speculation, the IAEA Governing Board reported Iran to the Security Council. Although this step had long been anticipated, it was far from clear how the Security Council would handle the Iran file. Indeed, we visited the UN in February 2006 and were concerned at the lack of clarity over what would happen next. 307. Reflecting this uncertainty, it took some weeks for the Security Council to issue a presidential statement on Iran—usually a formality, but in this case fraught with diplomatic complications. The statement, issued on 29 March 2006, reiterated the IAEA’s concerns about Iran and called on Tehran to take the steps required by the IAEA, namely to: • Re-establish full and sustained suspension of all enrichment-related and reprocessing activities, including research and development; • Reconsider the construction of a research reactor moderated by heavy water; • Ratify promptly and implement in full the Additional Protocol; and • Implement transparency measures, which extend beyond the formal requirements of the Safeguards Agreement and Additional Protocol. The statement also requested a report from the IAEA Director General on Iran’s compliance in 30 days.394 308. On 28 April 2006, Dr ElBaradei submitted his report to the IAEA Governing Board and the Security Council. The report noted that Iran had failed to cooperate with the IAEA with regard to requests for additional information on its enrichment programme. In addition, Iran’s decision to cease implementing the provisions of the Additional Protocol will limit further the IAEA’s ability to clarify issues and confirm the absence of undeclared nuclear material and activities. 395 391 “Implementation of the NPT Safeguards Agreement in the Islamic Republic of Iran”, Resolution adopted on 24 September 2005, IAEA Board of Governors, GOV/2005/77 392 “Implementation of the NPT Safeguards Agreement in the Islamic Republic of Iran”, Report by the Director General, GOV/2005/87, 18 November 2005 393 “Implementation of the NPT Safeguards Agreement in the Islamic Republic of Iran”, Resolution adopted on 4 February 2006, IAEA Governing Board, GOV/2006/14 394 UN Security Council Presidential Statement, SC/8679, 29 March 2006 395 “Nuclear report on Iran: Excerpts”, BBC News Online, 29 April 2006, news.bbc.co.uk Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 113 309. Following the release of this report, on 3 May 2006, the United Kingdom and France proposed an unexpectedly tough Security Council Resolution ordering Iran to suspend immediately “all enrichment-related and reprocessing activities”, including research and development, as well as the construction of a heavy water reactor or face the possibility of “further measures”. China and Russia immediately rejected the draft, saying it was too aggressive and needed to be reworked.396 Subsequent meetings of the Permanent Five (P5) made little progress on agreeing a Resolution. However, agreement was reached that the EU3 would launch a new diplomatic initiative concurrent with ongoing efforts to agree a Resolution. 310. On 15 May, EU foreign ministers endorsed a twin-track approach setting out both incentives and restrictive measures to convince Iran to end enrichment and reprocessing activities. In part, this decision reflected the hope that spelling out the incentives offered to Iran would address Russian and Chinese concerns and overcome the deadlock over a Security Council Resolution.397 On 6 June, EU Foreign Policy Chief Javier Solana presented the package of incentives to Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki and Ali Larijani, Iran’s chief nuclear negotiator. The package, which has not been made public, offers various incentives in exchange for Iran’s suspension of enrichment and reprocessing activities. These incentives are reported to include: assistance for Iran’s civilian nuclear energy programme, including help building light-water nuclear reactors and a guaranteed fuel supply; trade concessions; the lifting of the US ban on the sale of spare parts for Iran’s ageing civilian aircraft, which could include components from Boeing and Airbus; the waiver of trade sanctions against Iran to allow the purchase of US agricultural technology; support for Iran’s membership of the World Trade Organization; and an offer by the USA to end its policy against direct talks with Iran and to join in the nuclear negotiations.398 The ‘disincentives’ are believed to include a travel ban against Iran’s religious leaders and government officials involved in the nuclear programme and a freeze of Iranian financial assets abroad. 311. The initial Iranian response to the package has been positive, especially compared with the package proposed by the EU3 in the Summer of 2005, which Iran immediately rejected. Following his meeting with Javier Solana, Mr Larijani said “The proposals contain positive steps and also some ambiguities, which must be removed… We hope we will have negotiations and deliberations again after we have carefully studied the proposals to reach a balanced and logical result.” For his part, Mr Solana described the meeting as “very, very constructive.” However, Iran subsequently reacted badly to suggestions of an ultimatum when President Bush said that Iran had “weeks not months” to respond to the package. There have also been suggestions that Iran will make a ‘counter-proposal’399 312. We conclude that despite achieving a high degree of international agreement about the need to address Iran’s nuclear ambitions, there has been a worrying lack of consensus among the Permanent Members of the UNSC on how best to tackle this 396 “UN powers split over tough Iran resolution”, Financial Times, 4 May 2006 397 “EU offers Iran nuclear deal to end uranium enrichment”, Financial Times, 16 May 2006 398 “Iran to study EU incentive plan on nuclear issue”, Financial Times, 7 June 2006; and “US offering deals on trade to entice Iran”, The New York Times, 6 June 2006 399 “Iran sees ‘problems’ in offer to lure it off the nuclear path”, Financial Times, 12 June 2006 114 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism problem. We commend the Government’s commitment to diplomatic efforts to resolve the nuclear standoff with Iran. We sincerely regret the breakdown of negotiations in 2005 and Iran’s resumption of enrichment activities. We commend the international consensus achieved among members of the IAEA Governing Board and the efforts taken to maintain this consensus in the decision to report Iran to the UN Security Council. We also commend renewed efforts by the EU3 to resolve the crisis by diplomatic means and we recommend that the Government keep us informed of the progress of these negotiations. Options for the international community 313. Despite international consensus at the IAEA over Iran ahead of its referral to the UN Security Council, and broad consensus over the importance of preventing Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons, there has been uncertainty over how best to make Iran meet its international obligations. Over the past year, we asked the former Foreign Secretary on numerous occasions about the options available to the international community. 314. In February 2006, we asked him about what would happen when the Iran file reached the Security Council, but Mr Straw was reluctant to speak specifically about the steps that could be taken, speaking instead about the impact of being reported to the Security Council: I do not think anybody should underestimate the effect the authority of the Security Council can have. The question I ask is if the Security Council means nothing at all, why did the Iranian Government go to huge lengths, astonishing lengths, to lobby every single member of the Board of Governors they could find against this resolution? Why did they imply to many of these states that they would lose contracts in terms of oil? There were all sorts of insinuations made in order that this matter could not get before the Security Council. My answer to that is they are worried about being isolated and being before the court of world opinion.400 315. Speaking to the International Institute for Strategic Studies in London in March 2006, the then Foreign Secretary said that “diplomatic discretion” required that he reveal little of the plans for what happened next.401 Nevertheless, he set out the four principles according to which the United Kingdom is proceeding: First, our objective is to exert the pressure needed so that Iran restores a full verifiable suspension of all enrichment-related and reprocessing activity and cooperates in full with the Agency. Second, action taken by the Security Council should be incremental, one step at a time, and it should also be reversible so that we can respond to Iranian actions and reactions. We should leave the door open for negotiations with Iran to resume at any stage so that they can then come into compliance. 400 Ev 197, Q 12 (Oral evidence taken before the Foreign Affairs Committee on 8 February 2006, HC (2005–06) 904–i) 401 “Iran: the path ahead”, remarks by the Foreign Secretary, at the International Institute for Strategic Studies, 13 March 2006 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 115 Third, we want to maintain the strongest possible international consensus. And fourth and finally, the Security Council will be invited to act to reinforce the authority of the IAEA which will continue to play the central role in monitoring, verifying and resolving outstanding issues.402 The former Foreign Secretary emphasised the point that referral to the Security Council does not signal the end of diplomatic efforts: “If Iran is prepared to respect the requests of the IAEA in full, then the door to a negotiated solution will reopen.”403 Renewed engagement 316. On 7 June 2006, Foreign Secretary Margaret Beckett was upbeat about the prospects of the renewed efforts at diplomatic engagement with Iran. She told us: I know you will understand and I think the Committee will understand if I approach this at this moment in time with considerable caution because it was only yesterday that the meeting took place in Iran where proposals were put before the Government of Iran and they still have to consider them. What I would say is that there is actually a very strong coherence of understanding about the benefits of dealing with the issues which arise in Iran through diplomatic means and of the potential disadvantages of all of that going wrong… There is a very considerable amount of common ground, agreement, understanding and basic concern among the participants in that dialogue, the P5 and Germany. That is the first thing I would say. Second, coming from that common analysis and concern, there is a passionate desire to find a way out of this through diplomatic means and a way out which can be to everybody’s benefit. The reason that we did not make any statements in New York was because people wanted to do more work on being able to put something of greater substance to the Iranian Government and that work has proceeded in the interim and that then led to the discussions that we had in Vienna. In Vienna, again there was acceptance from all of the countries there that we should be offering to the Iranian people and the Iranian Government something which was mutually beneficial, that we should make plain our shared concern and our shared wish to resolve this problem as an international community but our shared understanding that the concerns of the IAEA Board were concerns that everyone shared. I do not really want to go any further than that but it was a deliberate choice and decision that we made—and I chaired the meeting, as you perhaps know—a united statement that I as the chair read out. It was a very short statement that we would not explain the content to anybody before it had been shared with the Government of Iran and we had given them a breathing space to think about it, to consider it, and to think about their response, and that we would do everything that we could to avoid jeopardising the prospects of agreement because of that absolutely shared basis of concern and interest.404 402 “Iran: the path ahead”, remarks by the Foreign Secretary, at the International Institute for Strategic Studies, 13 March 2006 403 ibid 404 Evidence from Foreign Secretary Margaret Beckett to the East Asia Inquiry, to be published in July as HC 860–v 116 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 317. It has been argued that one of the reasons for the failure of previous diplomatic efforts was the absence of US involvement. Although European players could offer a range of economic and political incentives, they could not offer the security guarantees that many believe could achieve an agreement. Indeed, the negotiations between the EU3 and Iran have been criticised for failing to address Iran’s security needs.405 Explaining Iran’s sense of international and regional insecurity, the former Foreign Secretary told us: [Y]ou have got to understand how isolated Iran feels in that Iran is not an Arab state… Iran feels over the last 100 years it has been humiliated by great powers, by the United Kingdom. There was this constitutional revolution in 1906 and in 1908 we came along backing the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company and ensured that we got the lion’s share of oil revenues and that went on for decades. We supported the Shah in what amounted to a takeover of that country and did not do anything when he implemented very crude anti-Islamic policies, including making it a criminal offence for women to wear even the hijab, the headscarf, on the street. We and the Soviet Union occupied the country for five years in the north from 1941–46 and then elements of British intelligence and the CIA stopped a perfectly democratic prime minister, Mossadeq, from office and failed to see the signs of the decadence of the Shah’s regime and many Western countries, actually less so the United Kingdom and some continental countries, actively supported Iran in the Iran–Iraq war. You have got to see it from their point of view and if we do not see it from their point of view as well we will make mistakes in the way we handle this.406 318. On top of this sense of ‘humiliation’, Iran is highly conscious of its encirclement: “It has nuclear-armed states to the east (Pakistan and India), north (Russia) and west (Israel). It was forced into a devastating eight-year war with Iraq that cost hundreds of thousands of lives. Above all it feels threatened by America. “What is the only country in the world, apart from Canada, that has the US on every border?” they like to ask in Tehran. “Iran,” comes the wry reply.407 Indeed, in the last Report in this Inquiry, our predecessor Committee noted: “Iran’s logic for developing a nuclear deterrent revolves around its isolation and the growing number of US clients in its neighbourhood. US troops are in Iraq and Afghanistan, Turkey is a member of NATO and Pakistan is a close ally of the US in the ‘war against terrorism’. Iran’s designation as part of the ‘axis of evil’ and Washington’s long standing hostility to the Islamist regime provide serious cause for concern in Tehran.”408 319. The former Foreign Secretary told us about the success of European cooperation on the Iran dossier: “[I]t is a very good illustration of operational European foreign policy. The fact that it has been led by the three largest countries in the EU has been an essential part of that. I should also say, however, that Javier Solana, the High Representative on foreign policy, has played an increasingly important role in this and so has his staff.”409 Asked about Washington’s attitude towards this process, the former Foreign Secretary told us: 405 See for example: “It is time to put security issues on the table with Iran”, Financial Times, 18 January 2006; and “Security holds the key to the Tehran tangle”, Financial Times, 2 February 2006 406 Ev 199, Q 18 (Oral evidence taken before the Foreign Affairs Committee on 8 February 2006, HC (2005–06) 904–i) 407 “Security holds the key to the Tehran tangle”, Financial Times, 2 February 2006 408 HC (2004–05) 36–I, para 364 409 Ev 199, Q 18 (Oral evidence taken before the Foreign Affairs Committee on 8 February 2006, HC (2005–06) 904–i) Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 117 [I]t is fair to say the United States initially were sceptical about this E3 process. They understood that in the aftermath of the Iraq war the architecture of diplomacy of the E3 made sense but there was worry in the United States—to go back to a previous point—that the Iranians would pick off France and Germany from the United Kingdom… Since then, I think it is fair to say, the United States Government’s confidence in the E3 process has increased. There has been more and more active cooperation between the E3 and the Government of the United States. This led to some key confidence building measures being offered by the United States Government.410 320. Nevertheless, the former Foreign Secretary also told us: “It would be much better if there were diplomatic relations and just closer relations altogether between the United States and Iran.… I have to say there is a lot of institutional hostility to the United States in Iran, as you may have noticed.”411 Explaining this hostility, the Foreign Secretary said: “Their history with Iran is much more fractured than is Europe’s… None of us have had the equivalent of the 444 day siege which humiliated an American President, some say that led to his demise, and all that has gone on since then. Nor do we in Europe have the same kind of very vocal and vociferous Iranian Diaspora that the American Government has to cope with.”412 321. Sir Christopher Meyer, former Ambassador in Washington, reiterated the importance of US engagement to us: “The one peaceful thing, if you like, the one non-military thing that has not been tried yet in dealing with Iran is intensive diplomatic negotiations between the United States and Iran. That is one piece that has not been put into the jigsaw.”413 Moves to initiate talks between the USA and Iran on Iraq have prompted optimism that there could scope for diplomatic engagement between the two countries. However, Washington has been insistent that any talks would be limited to the situation in Iraq, and has continued to resist both international and domestic calls to engage Iran directly on the nuclear issue. 322. Therefore, it is extremely positive that the USA appears to be engaging with the current diplomatic initiative. The USA has taken a truly significant step in offering to: lift the ban on the sale of spare parts for Iran’s civilian aircraft and to waive trade sanctions to allow the purchase of US agricultural technology; support Iran’s membership of the World Trade Organization; and possibly end its policy against direct talks with Iran and to join in the negotiations over Iran’s nuclear programme. 323. We asked Foreign Secretary Margaret Beckett about this positive development and whether it reflects a strategic shift rather than a tactical move. She told us: [A]lthough you are right in saying that the present process of engagement has been contributed to massively by this very substantial shift in the position of the United States of America, actually there would not have been anything to shift on, there would have been no foundations laid, had it not been for those three EU Foreign 410 Ev 198, Q 17 (Oral evidence taken before the Foreign Affairs Committee on 8 February 2006, HC (2005–06) 904–i) 411 Q 218 412 Ev 199, Q 18 (Oral evidence taken before the Foreign Affairs Committee on 8 February 2006, HC (2005–06) 904–i) 413 Q 358 118 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism Ministers and their initiative and I think that the credit belongs to them in starting that process, but then, of course, all credit is due to those in the United States for making a substantial shift… [I]t is a huge encouragement to the Government of Iran… that there is a choice of open to them and that one of those paths is one of real opportunity for a better future for the Iranian people. Obviously, the move by the United States is one of the major contributory factors in fleshing out… the sheer scale of that opportunity because it is now an opportunity that does not just relate to their wish to have access to civil nuclear power but also much more widely to their relationships with the whole international community… I say to you, hand on heart, no, I do not believe it is a matter of tactics by the United States. I think it signals a willingness by the United States to have a changed relationship with Iran if that is what Iran wants.414 324. We commend the high-level cooperation between the United Kingdom, France and Germany in their negotiations with Iran. We conclude that US engagement will be an essential component of any lasting agreement and commend US involvement in the current EU3 diplomatic initiative. We recommend that the Government use its close relationship with the USA to encourage it to engage further with Iran and that it set out in its response to this Report what steps it is taking to do this. Sanctions 325. Pressed on the likelihood that the Security Council would impose sanctions on Iran, the former Foreign Secretary told us: There are available to the Security Council, as you will be aware, non-military sanctions under Article 41 and everybody knows what those are and how they have been used in the past. I do not want to anticipate decisions that the Security Council might or might not make in respect of sanctions except to say that it does not follow at all that just because the matter is considered subject to a resolution in the Security Council there have to be sanctions as well.415 326. Deep scepticism over the likelihood of Security Council consensus on imposing sanctions has been borne out by the persistent failure to agree a Security Council Resolution. Doubts have centred on the positions of Russia and China, both of which are permanent members of the Security Council with a veto and both of which have close economic, military or trade relationships with Iran. Asked about the positions of these two countries, the former Foreign Secretary reiterated his belief in the strength of the consensus: What we have seen is Russia and China make some very important strategic decisions. Yes, in the case of China they rely to a significant degree on Iranian oil and gas and in the case of Russia their direct interests are different but very close because they are a neighbour and Iran has potentially very significant influence in the Caucasus to stir up trouble. I think that Russia and China judged against those direct 414 Evidence from Foreign Secretary Margaret Beckett to the Inquiry into Developments in the European Union, to be published as HC 768–iv 415 Ev 197, Q 15 (Oral evidence taken before the Foreign Affairs Committee on 8 February 2006, HC (2005–06) 904–i) Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 119 and immediate interests it was very important to make clear to the Iranians that the patience of the international community was being exhausted and if the Iranians were demanding of Russia and China that they choose between Iran or the international community and international solidarity then they would do the latter and not the former.416 327. Nevertheless, both China and Russia have repeatedly stated their commitment to a negotiated solution and resisted any reference to Chapter 7 of the UN Charter in relation to Iran; Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov has specifically said that Russia opposes imposing sanctions against Iran and that the “sole solution” will come through the IAEA.417 328. Speaking in May 2006, the Foreign Secretary Margaret Beckett said this about sanctions: “everybody believes that Iran should and must move into compliance with the view and the recommendation and the requirements of the IAEA Board. Everybody wants to find a way to achieve that. It may be that sanctions have to be applied. No one wants to apply sanctions if it’s not necessary.”418 329. The likelihood that the Security Council will fail to agree to impose sanctions on Iran has prompted speculation that steps could be taken by other bodies or a new ‘coalition of the willing’. A meeting of EU foreign ministers on 10 April 2006 considered the issue; EU Foreign Policy Chief Javier Solana said that the EU “should prepare itself for other punitive action against Tehran” in the event that there is deadlock in the Security Council. Such sanctions could include a visa ban on key figures, a block on the transfer of civilian nuclear technology, an arms embargo and suspension of negotiations with Iran on a free-trade deal.419 330. In addition to speculation over whether the international will for sanctions exists, there is doubt over what sort of sanctions might cause Iran to take the desired steps. Indeed, Iranians play down the effect of US sanctions, which were imposed after the 1979 revolution.420 Dr Ali Ansari, an Iran expert at St Andrews University and Chatham House, and a previous witness to this Inquiry, has warned about Iranian calculations of being able to withstand sanctions and the danger that sanctions will ‘whip up’ Iranian nationalism: Iran’s leaders calculate they can weather any sanctions (or, indeed, worse); but to achieve that they must whip up nationalistic fervour—further precluding any accommodation. This, of course, has the added benefit of consolidating a hardline government that would otherwise rest on precarious foundations… Persian nationalism is a powerful tool of mobilisation. The West should avoid fuelling it 416 Ev 200, Q 23 (Oral evidence taken before the Foreign Affairs Committee on 8 February 2006, HC (2005–06) 904–i) 417 “Sanctions against Iran 'bad idea'”, BBC News Online, 30 March 2006, news.bbc.co.uk 418 Remarks by the Foreign Secretary, New York, 9 May 2006, available at: www.fco.gov.uk 419 “Europe proposes limited sanctions to halt Tehran's nuclear ambitions”, The Guardian, 11 April 2006; and “EU considers Iran sanctions”, EUObserver, 11 April 2006 420 “Survival skills honed by embargo”, Financial Times, 2 February 2006 120 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism through reckless generalisations and hyperbole, which will simply alienate all Iranians.421 Asked whether imposing sanctions on Iran might work to reinforce the position of the current government, the former Foreign Secretary told us: “If they were ill-judged and illthought through, yes, and that is one of the reasons why I do not want to speculate particularly on what Article 41 measures might be available to the Security Council.”422 331. Analysts argue that any disruption of oil exports would have serious consequences for Iran, which exports more than 2.7 million barrels per day (equal to around 60% of its overall production). Oil receipts make up 80% of Iran’s foreign exchange and 60% of government revenue.423 However, any oil-industry related sanctions would have dire consequences for the international community. Iran is OPEC’s second largest oil producer and holds 10% of the world’s proven oil reserves. It also has the world’s second largest natural gas reserves (after Russia). Reflecting this, the former Foreign Secretary said: “On the oil market, no-one that I have seen is talking about sanctions which will impact on the oil market. The purpose of any measures taken under Article 41 would be to put pressure on the Iranian regime, not on the international community.”424 One sanction that could have the desired effect without damaging the international economy would be an embargo on the export of refined petroleum to Iran. Iran lacks refining capacity and is highly dependent on petrol imports (during his visit to Indonesia in May 2006, President Ahmadinejad signed a deal to build a refinery in Indonesia for Iranian oil).425 We have already noted the ‘disincentives’ reported to be included in the EU3 package (a travel ban against Iran’s religious leaders and government officials involved in the nuclear programme and a freeze of Iranian financial assets abroad). 332. We conclude that a broad range of options are available to the international community with regard to Iran, but that that some are fraught with difficulty. We further conclude that in the interest of legitimacy as well as effectiveness it is highly desirable that maximum international consensus is maintained on any action taken against Iran. Military action 333. Doubts over the impact and likelihood of sanctions have inevitably led to speculation over the possibility of military action against Iran. Such speculation has been heightened by press reports that the USA is preparing for possible major air attacks, including a tactical nuclear strike, to destroy suspected Iranian weapons sites.426 Although the White House has dismissed these reports, calling them “wild speculation”,427 President Bush has said that 421 “They are marching as to war”, Ali Ansari, The Independent on Sunday, 15 January 2006 422 Ev 201, Q 31 (Oral evidence taken before the Foreign Affairs Committee on 8 February 2006, HC (2005–06) 904–i) 423 “Survival skills honed by embargo”, Financial Times, 2 February 2006 424 “Iran: the path ahead”, remarks by the Foreign Secretary, at the International Institute for Strategic Studies, 13 March 2006 425 “Survival skills honed by embargo”, Financial Times, 2 February 2006; and “Tehran searches for allies in Muslim world”, Financial Times, 10 May 2006 426 “The Iran Plans”, The New Yorker, 17 April 2006 427 “Bush dismisses report of military strike on Iran”, The Independent, 11 April 2006 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 121 all options, including the use of force, are “on the table” to prevent Iran from developing nuclear weapons.428 334. The former Foreign Secretary was firm in his rejection of the military option, saying on numerous occasions that it was not on the agenda. In October 2005, Jack Straw told the Committee: [P]eople need to chill a bit on this. Military action is not on anybody’s agenda with respect to Iran, and that has been made clear repeatedly by the American Government and clearly by Condoleezza Rice yesterday at the joint interview I did with her from Birmingham, Alabama. It is simply not on the agenda. There is always a caveat entered on behalf of the President of the United States, who is also Commander in Chief, which I understand; but it is not on the agenda of the American Government and it is not on our agenda or anybody’s agenda on the board of governors.429 In March 2006, he commented on the international position towards military action: What I know is that if we were more belligerent the international consensus would weaken very quickly, and I happen to believe that the most likely way of resolving this satisfactorily, and with Iran coming into compliance, is by maintaining a strong international consensus, and that is my judgment, it is the judgment of my European colleagues and we have been supported in that by American colleagues as well.430 335. However, there is concern over a possible difference of view between the Foreign Office and Downing Street on this issue. Unlike the former Foreign Secretary, the Prime Minister has never categorically ruled out military action against Iran. Asked whether he would give an absolute assurance that he would not support an attack on Iran, the Prime Minister told the House: “[W]hen the President of Iran is talking about wiping Israel off the face of the earth and when young people are signing up to be suicide bombers directed at US, UK and Israeli targets with at least the tacit acceptance of and possibly at the instigation of the Iranian regime, this is not the time to send a message of weakness.”431 The new Foreign Secretary has also held back from explicitly ruling out military action; at a press conference on 8 May 2006, Margaret Beckett said: “The way that I choose to express it is that it’s not the intention, it is not anybody’s intention to take the course of military action and that I think is… simple and straight forward and clear.” 432 336. Turning to the effectiveness of any potential military action against Iran, there are doubts whether the military option offers a long-term solution to preventing Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons.433 In February 2006, the Oxford Research Group published a report on the consequences of war against Iran. This report found that although attacks 428 “Bush keeps Iran military option”, BBC News Online, 18 April 2006, news.bbc.co.uk 429 Q 91 430 “Iran: the path ahead”, remarks by the Foreign Secretary, at the International Institute for Strategic Studies, 13 March 2006 431 HC Deb, 18 April 2006, col 117 432 Remarks by the Foreign Secretary, New York, 9 May 2006, available at: www.fco.gov.uk 433 “America must use a wide lens for its strategy on Iran”, Financial Times, 8 May 2006 122 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism would severely damage Iranian nuclear and missile programmes, Iran would have many methods of responding in the months and years that followed. Moreover: However badly Iran’s nuclear infrastructure was damaged in an attack, an immediate response would be to reconstitute the infrastructure and work rapidly and in secret towards a clear nuclear weapons capability. This would probably involve giving formal notice of withdrawal from the Non-Proliferation Treaty, followed by the immediate reconstitution of the nuclear infrastructure, developing it wherever possible in a more survivable manner. This would include systems redundancy, dispersal of research, development and production capabilities and the use of deep underground facilities for future work wherever feasible. Furthermore, there may already be elements of redundancy built in to the current Iranian civil nuclear programme and there may be elements of which the United States is unaware. If so, this would aid the reconstitution of capabilities. More generally, any hope of negotiating away Iran’s suspected nuclear weapons programme in the years after a US attack would vanish, undermining global nonproliferation efforts. Rather than living with an Iran that had the potential to produce nuclear weapons, the US action would almost certainly guarantee an overtly nucleararmed Iran for decades to come or, alternatively, further instances of military action.434 337. In addition, there could be far reaching and serious consequences for the international community. In May 2006, Lt Gen Victor Renuart, the director of planning for the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, warned that military action against Iran would be “fraught with risk and would have repercussions across the region”.435 Not only could military action rally the Iranian public around what is seen as a national right to a nuclear programme, but it would also inflame Muslim opinion across the world. There is well founded concern that: “An attack on Iran would proliferate further the lethal hybrid of Islamism and nationalism incubated by the invasion of Iraq, fusing an irreducible identity into an undeterrable ideology.”436 In addition to dramatically increasing the international cost of oil, a military attack could unleash a much more malign Iranian approach in neighbouring Iraq. Iran could also use its allies and proxies across the region to retaliate, including the Lebanese Hezbollah and the Palestinian Islamic Jihad. 338. We asked Professor Philippe Sands QC about the legality of any future military action against Iran. He told us: Classically there are two grounds to use force in international relations under international law: one, in self-defence, Articles 2(4) and 51 of the United Nations Charter; and, two, where authorised by the Security Council. In classic international law there is no third ground, but the United Nations Charter, when it was adopted in 434 “Iran: Consequences of a war ”, Oxford Research Group, February 2006 435 “Strikes on Iran too risky, says US general”, The Daily Telegraph, 2 May 2006 436 “A grand bargain still only solution on Iran It is time to surmount hysteria and hyperbole on both sides”, Financial Times, 15 May 2006 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 123 1945, put into its preamble into Article 2 a commitment to protect fundamental human rights.437 Applying this to Iran, Professor Sands said: If you look at the situation in Iran… the allegation is that it is engaged in the production of nuclear material for the purposes of producing an atomic bomb. If that is the case – and facts obviously are central – it would be in violation of its obligations under the 1968 Treaty on Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons.438 Assuming those facts are correct and assuming that Iran persists in its actions what is to happen? At the first stage we are in discussion right now of moving the debate to the Security Council and the Security Council has adopted a first declaration urging Iran to bring itself into compliance with its international obligations… Let us assume that after the declaration Iran does not bring itself into compliance what happens next? It goes back to the Security Council, the Security Council adopts, one assumes, a resolution, negotiations go on and ultimately a point may be reached in which there is a stalemate and in which the Security Council tells Iran what to do and Iran refuses… I think it is premature to reach a firm view on what ought to happen in those circumstances but one can see two arguments. One argument is that when a State which is a party to the Treaty on Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons violates its obligations and is found to be in violation by the Security Council, States are entitled to use force in self defence. That might be one view that could be put by the Bush Administration, adopting a particular interpretation of pre-emption. Another view would be that in those circumstances it is only for the international organisations concerned to act and that anything that falls short of a threatened use of force against an individual State or a group of States will not justify the use of force until it has been authorised by the Security Council, perhaps in association with the International Atomic Energy Agency.439 339. Spelling out the situation regarding weapons of mass destruction, Professor Sands told us: “My own view is that the existing rules of international law justifying the use of force where an attack is threatened are sufficient to allow a State, including the United Kingdom, to act where there is credible evidence that a weapon of mass destruction is being assembled with the intent of using it in relation to, in this case, the United Kingdom.”440 However, the situation would change in the event that Iran withdrew from the NPT: “[S]tates as sovereign entities are free to ratify treaties and, in accordance with the relevant rules, to opt out of them… [T]hat, of course, would leave them in a circumstance in which they would not be open to the criticism that they are not complying with their international legal obligations and would transform, I think, the nature of the legal debate as to what can be done to respond to that situation.”441 437 Q 315 438 Q 304 439 Q 311 440 Q 298 441 Q 317 124 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 340. We conclude that military action against Iran would be likely to unleash a host of extremely serious consequences both in the Middle East and elsewhere and would not be guaranteed to prevent Iran from developing nuclear weapons in the long term. We further conclude that the Government should not undertake or support military action against Iran until all other options have been exhausted or without broad agreement among its international allies. We also conclude that the lack of international consensus for sanctions against Iran combined with the extremely worrying prospect of military action mean that all possible diplomatic efforts must be applied to reaching a negotiated agreement with Iran; we recommend that the Government make this point absolutely clear to the administration in Washington. Iran and the ‘War against Terrorism’ Links with terrorism 341. In previous Reports in this inquiry, our predecessor Committee noted both Iran’s links with terrorist groups and its unhelpful role in neighbouring Iraq. In its Report of January 2004, our predecessor Committee noted that Iran retains links to Palestinian and Lebanese terrorist groups and has the ability to diminish the capacity of terrorists to derail the political process in Israel and Palestine.442 These concerns remain and have been exacerbated by the confrontational stance adopted by Iran’s new President. 342. The former Foreign Secretary told us about Iran’s links with terrorist groups: “We have a well-founded belief that Iran is funding Hezbollah and the Palestinian Islamic Jihad and has strong connections with them. We believe they are also funding Hamas as well although it appears that a good deal of the funds for Hamas comes from around the Arab world.”443 The Foreign Secretary subsequently wrote to us about evidence that Iran has brought terrorism into Western Europe: “The Iranian authorities are believed to have been directly involved in the murder of Iranian dissidents and opposition figures in Europe during the 1980s and 1990s.”444 The former Foreign Secretary also told us: “Iran’s intelligence services were significantly reformed during the Presidency of Mohammad Khatami from 1997 to 2005, although a number of senior figures who left the Ministry of Intelligence during that time have returned to frontline politics in Ahmadinejad’s government.”445 343. The USA has been especially vocal in its criticism of Iran in this area: in March 2006, US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice referred to Iran as “a kind of central banker for terrorism in important regions like Lebanon through Hezbollah in the Middle East.”446 Images of Iranian volunteers signing up as would-be suicide bombers for attacks against “oppressors of the Muslim world” have done little to assuage such concerns.447 442 HC (2004–05) 36–I, paras 23–24; and HC (2003–04) 81, paras 192–203 443 Ev 195, Q 4 (Oral evidence taken before the Foreign Affairs Committee on 8 February 2006, HC (2005–06) 904–i) 444 Ev 68 445 Ev 68 446 Remarks by US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, Roundtable With Australian, Indonesian and Latin American Journalists, Washington, DC, 9 March 2006 447 “Iran tension”, Financial Times, 18 April 2006 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 125 Position towards Israel 344. Since his election, President Ahmadinejad has made a number of inflammatory comments that have further alarmed the international community. His remarks about Israel have been particularly unpalatable. On 26 October 2005, President Ahmadinejad addressed a conference in Tehran on “A World Without Zionism”. In his speech, he called for “Israel to be wiped from the map”, and said that “the Islamic world will not let its historic enemy live in its heartland… the new wave of (attacks) in Palestine... will erase this stigma from the Islamic world” and that “anybody who recognises Israel will burn in the fire of the Islamic nation’s fury”.448 On 27 October 2005, the Prime Minister responded to these comments: These sentiments are completely and totally unacceptable… This is unacceptable… when we hear statements like that made about Israel, it makes us feel very angry. It is just completely wrong, this, and it indicates and underlines I am afraid how much some of those places need reform themselves. Because how are we going to build a more secure world with that type of attitude? It is a disgrace I am afraid.449 345. Then in December 2005, President Ahmadinejad said that the Nazi Holocaust was ‘a myth’. He said that he did not believe that six million Jews had died at the hands of the Nazis last century and that “they have created a myth today that they call the massacre of Jews and they consider it a principle above God, religions and the prophets”. He called for Europe or North America—even Alaska—to host a Jewish state, not the Middle East.450 346. Initially, some analysts dismissed such comments as rhetoric employed by a new and inexperienced president seeking to rally the Iranian population behind him. However, the repeated use of such inflammatory and unacceptable rhetoric is not new or confined to the President. The former Foreign Secretary told us about this: Can I just say that one of the problems of dealing with Iran is that this position which President Ahmadinejad articulated in such a dreadful way is a longstanding one of the post-revolutionary republic. At one of my meetings with President Khatami, who genuinely was a moderate, I said to him when he was talking about Israel that it would help if, number one, they recognised the rest of the world thought a two-state solution was appropriate and, number two, if he as president of this republic ordered that the Shahab 2 missiles should not have painted on their side in English “Death to Israel” when they were paraded in the national parade each year. I was received with a shrug.451 Involvement in neighbouring states 347. There is strong evidence of malign Iranian involvement in neighbouring Iraq. On 6 October 2005, at a joint press conference with Iraqi President Jalal Talabani, the Prime 448 “Iranian leader sparks alarm by saying Israel 'must be wiped off the map'”, Financial Times, 27 October 2005 449 Press conference at EU informal summit Hampton Court, 27 October 2005 450 “Holocaust comments spark outrage”, BBC News Online, 14 December 2005, news.bbc.co.uk 451 Ev 195, Q 5 (Oral evidence taken before the Foreign Affairs Committee on 8 February 2006, HC (2005–06) 904–i) 126 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism Minister said that information linked Iran to recent bomb attacks against British troops in Iraq: “What is clear is that there have been new explosive devices used, not just against British troops but elsewhere in Iraq. The particular nature of those devices lead us either to Iranian elements or to Hezbollah, because they are similar to the devices used by Hezbollah that is funded and supported by Iran. However we cannot be sure of this at the present time.”452 348. The former Foreign Secretary repeated this assessment, telling a press conference that explosives that killed at least eight British soldiers originated from either Hezbollah or Iran. “There were improvised explosive devices used against a number of British convoys which killed, probably at least eight British soldiers and soldiers from other parts of the coalition… The forensic examination of those devices linked their design to Hezbollah and to Iran. That’s the evidence we’ve put to the Iranians.”453 More recently, President Bush in March 2006 accused Iran of supplying components for some of the most powerful improvised explosive devices (IEDs) used in Iraq.454 349. There is also long-standing concern over political interference by Iran in Iraq given its close link with a number of Shia individuals and groups there. Yahia Said, Research Fellow of the Centre for the Study of Global Governance at the LSE, commented: Iran has a very big footprint in Iraq, a big influence. It goes through a variety of channels. It has channels to a variety of the actors in Iraq. Certain groups that enjoy Iranian support have been instrumental in fomenting sectarian violence in Iraq. Specifically I would mention the Supreme Council of Islamic Revolution in Iraq and the associated Badr Brigade. These are two organisations that have been established in Iran and have benefited from direct Iranian material and moral support for many years. However, the Iranian involvement in Iraq is more complex than that. They have been supporting nationalist group, insurgents group and so on. Iran, I believe, views Iraq as an insurance policy, as a card that it could use should it be subjected to a form of perceived or expected aggression from the United States, and therefore, what Iranian influence in Iraq has been over the three years is to try to keep the situation at a certain level of instability, so that it could use it as leverage in relation with the United States.455 Zaki Chehab, Political Editor of Arabic daily newspaper Al Hayat, also told us about the strength of Iranian influence in Iraq.456 350. Within Iraq’s borders there are Iranian exiles based at Ashraf city. They have protected persons status under the fourth Geneva Convention. At a time of increasing dialogue with the regime in Tehran it is important for governments of the coalition in Iraq, and the Iraqi government, to reiterate their recognition of these exiles’ protected persons status. 452 Joint press conference with Iraqi President Jalal Talabani, Downing Street, 6 October, available at: www.number10.gov.uk 453 “Britain denies Iran bomb claims”, BBC News Online, 16 October 2005, news.bbc.co.uk 454 “Bush accuses Iran of supplying Iraqi rebels”, Financial Times, 14 March 2006 455 Q 270 [Mr Said] 456 Q 270 [Mr Chehab] Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 127 351. The importance of Iran’s position in Iraq is indicated by recent moves to initiate talks between Washington and Tehran over the situation there. This move followed Washington’s authorisation of its ambassador in Iraq, Zalmay Khalilzad, to talk to Iranian officials about Iraq. Iran and the USA have had no official relations since the 1979 Islamic revolution.457 352. In contrast, Iran is viewed to have taken a cooperative approach to the situation in Afghanistan, seeing a shared goal in removing the Taliban and tackling the drug problem. As the former Foreign Secretary told us: “Iran has been constructive in dealings with Afghanistan and with the international community in Afghanistan. It is perhaps an illustration of some ambiguity of Iranian policy, but it has been. They have, too, an identity of interest with Western Europe and with the United Kingdom over the issue of drugs because almost all the heroin from Afghanistan goes through Iran and I am told that there are up to two million Iranians who are heroin addicts, so it is a really serious problem.”458 353. We conclude that Iran’s position towards the ‘war against terrorism’ has been contradictory, and extremely unhelpful in a number of key areas. Iran continues to have links with terrorist groups, while statements by the Iranian president about Israel and denial of the Holocaust are deplorable and cannot be dismissed as empty rhetoric. We commend the Prime Minister’s robust response to these comments and recommend that the Government continue to make clear to the Iranian Government that such behaviour and comments are unacceptable. Iran and Reform 354. There are also serious human rights concerns in Iran. Our recent Report on the FCO’s annual human rights report included a section on Iran. In particular, we noted concerns about: the punishment of juveniles; freedom of expression; pressure on NGOs and civil society groups; detention of Christians and other issues related to freedom of worship including repression of the Baha’is; detention of political opponents; use of the death penalty and public executions; and women’s rights.459 We took evidence from key international human rights groups, who raised their concerns about Iran. Dr Nazila Ghanea-Hercock also wrote to us about the situation: Increasingly the evidence has shown that Iran has a constitutional system that has the veneer of democracy and balance of powers, but that in reality its framework makes the very notion of the independence of the judiciary and a society built on equality of opportunity and respect for rights impossible. The Iranian legal system is inherently gender-biased, racist, and has built within it a hierarchy of discrimination based on religion or belief… I therefore fear that any encouragement by the UK and EU for Iran to commit to human rights and dialogue will, at present, prove futile.460 457 “Tehran prepared to hold talks with Washington on Iraq”, Financial Times, 17 March 2006 458 Q 246 459 HC (2005–06) 574, para 148 460 HC (2005–06) 574, para 153 128 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism The National Spiritual Assembly of the Baha’is of the United Kingdom also expressed concern about the continued persecution of Baha’is in Iran.461 We further noted that the deterioration in relations with Iran over the nuclear issue was making dialogue increasingly difficult.462 355. In its response to that Report, the Government said: We continue to use our diplomatic contacts with the Iranian government to promote respect for human rights and political freedoms, and actively encourage the EU to do likewise. In the absence of an effective EU/Iran Human Rights Dialogue, these efforts are even more important. We will continue to draw public attention to human rights violations in Iran and to press the Iranian authorities to address them. We will also continue to support debate in United Nations for the work of United National mechanisms. All EU counties co-sponsored a resolution on human rights in Iran adopted by the United Nations General Assembly in December 2005.463 356. There are also concerns over the shortcomings of the democratic process in Iran. Elections to the Majlis (parliament) in 2004 were deeply flawed. The Guardian Council, an unelected body that constitutionally ‘interprets’ Islamic orthodoxy, barred around 2,500 of the 8,200 prospective candidates, including 87 existing members, from standing. After a request by Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei that it review the bans, the Council made minimal changes and warned that any further challenge to its ruling would be “making war on God”. Nearly 1,200 more candidates withdrew in protest.464 357. The former Foreign Secretary told us about his concerns in this area: Iran is not free and democratic by customary norms and… their human rights record is lamentable… Iran is a very complicated society. It is replete with ambiguity… Aspects of it appear to be democratic and certainly responsive to public opinion, aspects of it are very autocratic. One of our officials, who knows Iran very well, described it as a pluralist theocracy with some pressure towards democracy but some pressure away from it, and I think that is probably the best way of describing it. Essentially what you have got is a series of democratic institutions, including the presidency and Majlis, the parliament, paralleled by a series of undemocratic institutions which are appointed, which are the guardian council, council of ecclesiastical experts, the supreme leader and this expediency council which is there to negotiate in-between.465 Speaking about the role of the international community in encouraging reform in Iran, the former Foreign Secretary told the International Institute for Strategic Studies: 461 HC (2005–06) 574, Ev 85–86 462 HC (2005–06) 574, para 155 463 Foreign & Commonwealth Office, First Report from the Foreign Affairs Committee; Session 2005–06; Annual Report on Human Rights 2005; Response of the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, Cm 6774, May 2006 464 “Iran theocrats’ coup: President Khatami’s reformist project lies in ruins”, Financial Times, 23 February 2004 465 Ev 199, Q 18 (Oral evidence taken before the Foreign Affairs Committee on 8 February 2006, HC (2005–06) 904–i) Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 129 [W]e in the rest of the international community should not look the other way when the regime fails to abide by international standards in the way in which it treats its own people. We are not going to take sides in respect of Iran’s internal political debates, these are for the Iranians to resolve and they are perfectly capable of doing so themselves. Given their history, Iranians are understandably sensitive about any hint of outside interference, but this doesn’t mean that we should stop standing up for principles of human rights and fundamental freedoms which we hold dear ourselves, and to which the Iranian government have continually signed up themselves, and to which the Iranians aspire: freedom of speech; transparent, genuinely democratic and accountable government; respect for the right of minorities and women; an independent judiciary.466 358. Asked what the United Kingdom is doing about the human rights situation, Mr Straw said: “Well there is the human rights dialogue which the European Union operate, and it is better to operate than not operate. I am not suggesting that it has a huge effect day by day, it doesn’t, but it is very important that we should make clear to the Iranian regime that we expect them to abide by the human rights standards to which they themselves have signed up.”467 Speaking more generally about how the international community can influence that domestic Iranian reform debate, Mr Straw commented: [W]e should help the Iranians to make informed choices for themselves by helping to improve the flow of information into that country. Iranians are highly educated, broad-minded, and eager to form their own opinions on matters of vital interest. The young in particular instinctively grasp the potential of globalisation and want Iran to emerge from behind its self-imposed isolation. Iran has more web journals per capita than any other country in the world, but at the moment the regime tries to maintain control on information flows into Iran through its monopoly of state-controlled broadcasting, and for example by blocking independent sources of information, as it did recently with the BBC Persian Services website.468 359. Asked about the feasibility of a BBC Farsi television service, the former Foreign Secretary told us: “The BBC is doing some work for us at the moment on scoping this. I am sympathetic to funding it, in fact I would be delighted to fund it. The only difficulty is I do not have the cheque book, which is held in the Treasury under arrangements which we have in the British Government.”469 360. Whilst we recognise the need for continuing dialogue with the Iranian regime, both in relation to its involvement in Iraq and the wider international scene, we are concerned that the United Kingdom’s criticisms and concerns should be robustly and unambiguously articulated. 361. We conclude that the human rights situation in Iran remains extremely unsatisfactory. We recommend that the Government continue to use its diplomatic 466 “Iran: the path ahead”, remarks by the Foreign Secretary, at the International Institute for Strategic Studies, 13 March 2006 467 Ibid 468 Ibid 469 Q 219 130 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism contacts with the Iranian government to promote respect for human rights and political and religious freedoms, and actively encourage the EU to do likewise. We further conclude that the democratic process in Iran is deeply flawed, and that although this issue must be handled with care, there is a role for the United Kingdom and the international community more broadly in supporting reform efforts. We recommend that the Government seriously consider funding a Farsi BBC television service. Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 8 131 Afghanistan Background 362. Previous Reports in this inquiry have described events in Afghanistan following the 11 September 2001 terrorist attacks in the USA and the fall of the Taliban in November 2001. In June 2002, our predecessor Committee noted the importance of stabilising Afghanistan as well as the great challenges ahead.470 Four and a half years after the fall of the Taliban, Afghanistan has completed the institution-creating process outlined in the 2001 Bonn agreement, the post-Taliban plan for the country’s political transition: Afghanistan now has an elected National Assembly and President. However, the extent of government authority remains limited, there are concerns over the lack of progress tackling the country’s powerful military commanders, opium poppy cultivation remains endemic and the level of violence is increasing. Highlighting these concerns, the US Ambassador to Afghanistan in February 2006 warned that the country risks “sliding back into chaos if western countries do not step up efforts to bolster government control outside the capital.”471 363. In January 2006, while making a statement about the deployment of British forces to Afghanistan, the then Secretary of State for Defence Dr John Reid, explained why Afghanistan is so important to the United Kingdom and the international community: Just over four years ago, on 11 September 2001, we were given a brutal lesson in the consequences of leaving Afghanistan in the hands of the Taliban and the terrorists. Since then, we in this country have been at the forefront of the international effort, under the auspices of the United Nations, to defeat international terrorism, to free Afghanistan from the ruthless grip of the Taliban and to rid the country of the menace of the terrorists and the greed of the drug traffickers… We cannot risk Afghanistan again becoming a sanctuary for terrorists. We have seen where that leads, be it in New York or in London. We cannot ignore the opportunity to bring security to a fragile but vital part of the world, and we cannot go on accepting Afghan opium being the source of 90 per cent. of the heroin that is applied to the veins of the young people of this country. For all those reasons, it is in our interests, as the United Kingdom and as a responsible member of the international community, to act.472 364. On 31 January–1 February 2006, the United Kingdom co-chaired the London Conference on Afghanistan. Foreign Office Minister Dr Kim Howells told the House that the Conference aimed: 470 Foreign Affairs Committee, Seventh Report of Session 2001–02, Foreign Policy Aspects of the War Against Terrorism, HC 384, paras 101–117 471 “US envoy warns on efforts to build Afghanistan”, Financial Times, 3 February 2006 472 HC Deb, 26 January 2006, col 1529 132 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism To launch the Afghanistan Compact, the successor to the Bonn Agreement. The Compact provides the framework for international community engagement in Afghanistan for the next five years. To provide an opportunity for the Government of Afghanistan to present its Interim National Development Strategy to the international community. The strategy sets out the Government’s priorities for accelerating development, increasing security, tackling the drugs trade, and strengthening governance. To ensure that the Government of Afghanistan has adequate resources to meet its domestic ambitions and international commitments.473 The Conference resulted in pledges of over US$10.5 billion over the next five years; the United Kingdom pledged £500 million over the next three years. 365. Speaking at the opening of the Conference, the Prime Minister committed the United Kingdom to the task of stabilising Afghanistan: This is a struggle that of course primarily concerns the Afghan people, but it is also a struggle that concerns all of us, and it is why we are here today and it is why we are determined to see this through. It is why, whatever your challenges, we will be there with you, at your side, helping you. It is in your interest to do so, it is in our interest to do so, it is in the interest of the whole of the international community. This is a struggle for freedom, and for moderation, and for democracy and we are with you in it.474 366. We conclude that bringing stability to Afghanistan remains a key British interest. We commend the Government for its role in hosting and co-chairing the London Conference and welcome the Prime Minister’s comments that the United Kingdom will remain by the side of the Afghan people in their struggle for freedom, moderation and democracy. The Security Situation 367. In its last Report in this inquiry, our predecessor Committee described the military operations in Afghanistan. The Report noted that overall the security situation had improved, but that there remained a continuing threat to foreign nationals in the country.475 Since that Report there have been worrying signs of a deterioration in the security environment. 368. More than 1,600 people were killed in 2005, and the violence is on the rise. In May, Afghanistan saw some of the fiercest fighting since the overthrow of the Taliban in 2001.476 Moreover, similarities between the violence in Afghanistan and Iraq have prompted concern that the Taliban is learning from the insurgency in Iraq. There has been an 473 HC Deb, 17 January 2006, cols 27–28WS 474 Remarks by the Prime Minister, opening of the London Conference on Afghanistan, 31 January 2006, available at: www.fco.gov.uk 475 HC (2004–05) 36–I, para 338 476 “Scores killed in Afghan violence”, BBC News Online, 18 May 2006, news.bbc.co.uk Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 133 increase in the number of kidnappings and roadside and suicide attacks.477 There have already been more suicide attacks in 2006 than in the whole of 2005 (17) and 2004 (five).478 There are also fears that the violence is spreading to previously safe provinces. 369. A field report by the Senlis Council, a drug policy advisory body, on the situation in the three southern provinces of Helmand, Kandahar and Nangarhar reveals a worrying picture. The report notes that the Afghan government has never established full control over the three provinces, but even its limited control is “rapidly diminishing, with political volatility now reaching urban areas.”479 There are reports that insurgent groups are operating more freely in the area and there has been an increase in the number of kidnappings and suicide attacks. Some of these strategies “point to an ‘Iraqisation’ of the Afghan insurgency tactics.”480 Taliban groups are using political violence and illegal economic activities to strengthen their powerbase. 370. We asked the former Foreign Secretary about this. In October 2005, Mr Straw told us: “I do not have the precise figures about Taliban activity. It is certainly the case that they are not completely defeated, and there remains quite a serious challenge.”481 In March 2006, he painted a bleaker picture; asked about the Taliban resurgence, he told us: The Taliban threat is certainly at least as severe as at any stage since the original removal of the Taliban four years ago. I cannot say exactly whether it is worse than at any other period… Let me say that it is serious and that is understood, and it is serious down in the Helmand province. It is one of the reasons we are going down there, because if we want to try and establish the writ of the elected government and deal with the drugs problem, we have to deal with the Taliban.482 371. We conclude that there has been a worrying deterioration in the security situation in Afghanistan, and that there are signs that the tactics that have brought such devastation to Iraq are being replicated in Afghanistan. We recommend that in its response to this Report the Government indicate what steps it is taking to prevent further deterioration. Counter-Narcotics Strategy 372. Previous reports in this inquiry have outlined the problem of opium poppy cultivation and drug trafficking. Our predecessor Committee noted that this is not only a problem for Afghanistan, but also for the United Kingdom and Europe; 95% of heroin in the United Kingdom originates from Afghanistan.483 The United Kingdom is in the lead on an ambitious programme to reduce opium poppy cultivation. The last Report in this inquiry 477 “Taliban Shift Tactics in Afghanistan”, Terrorism Focus, The Jamestown Foundation, 18 April 2006, volume III, issue 15 478 “Scores killed in Afghan violence”, BBC News Online, 18 May 2006, news.bbc.co.uk; and “Remember Afghanistan? Insurgents bring suicide terror to country”, The Independent, 17 January 2006 479 “Field Notes: Afghanistan Insurgency Assessment, The Signs of an Escalating Crisis”, The Senlis Council, 7 April 2006 480 Ibid 481 Q 114 [Mr Straw] 482 Q 222 [Mr Straw] 483 HC (2004–05) 36–I, paras 332–337 134 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism concluded: “the United Kingdom’s lead role in co-ordinating the UN’s counter-narcotics strategy in Afghanistan is one of the Government’s most important responsibilities overseas.”484 373. On 14 February 2006, Foreign Office Minister Dr Kim Howells set out to Parliament Afghanistan’s revised National Drug Control Strategy. The Strategy has four main priorities: • disrupting the drugs trade by targeting traffickers and their backers; • strengthening and diversifying legal rural livelihoods; • reducing the demand for illicit drugs and treatment of problem drug users; and • developing state institutions at the central and provincial level. 485 Previous Reports in this inquiry have noted the importance of using mosques to spread the anti-drugs message and the need to divert the entrepreneurial energies of profiteering warlord commanders into less harmful activities. The last Report in this inquiry noted that both of these approaches must be “essential parts of a successful strategy.”486 374. The United Kingdom has helped set up Afghan counter-narcotics institutions and provided mentoring and training as well as equipment. On 14 February 2006, Dr Howells told Parliament about this: [T]he UK has helped to establish and provide training for the Counter Narcotics Police of Afghanistan—the lead drug law enforcement agency, headquartered in Kabul, with 7 provincial offices. The UK is also providing training for the Afghan Special Narcotics Force, an elite and highly trained force equipped to tackle high value targets across the country. We are also working with the international community to recruit and train a counter narcotics Criminal Justice Task Force of Afghan investigators, prosecutors and judges to work with the Counter Narcotics Police, to be able to push through successful drugs investigations and prosecutions. The UK has funded the development of five drug treatment centres and is working with the Ministry of Counter Narcotics to determine how best to support activity in this area following the completion of UNODC’s survey on drug use within Afghanistan late last year. We are also supporting the US led Poppy Elimination Programme (PEP) by funding the salaries of Afghan staff charged with raising awareness of the illegality of the opium industry and monitoring Governor-led eradication in priority poppy growing provinces.487 375. When our predecessor Committee visited Afghanistan in 2004, it heard that the absence of secure prisons hindered the development of the criminal justice system. In April 2006, the former Foreign Secretary wrote to us about this issue. The United Kingdom is a 484 HC (2004–05) 36–I, para 337 485 HC Deb, 14 February 2006, cols 82–85WS 486 HC (2004–05) 36-I, para 336 487 HC Deb, 14 February 2006, cols 82–85WS Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 135 major donor to a UN Office for Drugs and Crime (UNODC) project to build a secure prison facility just outside Kabul. This facility will be used to house those convicted of serious drug trafficking offences and will be in operation from the beginning of August. Her Majesty’s Prison Service has been advising the UNODC during the design of the facility and a team of UK prison officers has been involved in training Afghan prison officers in high security prison techniques. In addition, the USA is planning to build a secure detention facility near Kabul airport as part of a Counter-Narcotics Justice Centre. “These two facilities will enable the Afghan authorities to hold the most dangerous drug offenders. The Afghan authorities are also currently considering their infrastructure and training needs for the remainder of their prison estate and we will consider what further assistance we can provide to them, particularly in respect of increasing their capacity to house drug offenders at provincial level.”488 376. Overall spending by the United Kingdom on counter-narcotics work in Afghanistan increased from £1.6 million in 2002–03 to around £20 million in 2004–05. In June 2005 that figure was more than doubled to around £50 million for 2005–06, which included £30 million for the development of alternative livelihoods for farmers and rural labourers.489 A further increase was announced in September 2005, with a revised budget for 2005–06 of £50 million for alternative livelihoods and £6 million for eradication activity. Over the following three years, the United Kingdom plans to spend more than £270 million; £130 million will be provided by the Department for International Development, with the remainder coming from the FCO, the Ministry of Defence and other departments.490 377. We commend the Government’s work assisting the Afghan authorities to establish secure prison facilities and in providing training in prison techniques. We recommend that the Government set out in its response to this Report what further assistance it could give in this area, particularly in respect of increasing the Afghan capacity to house drug offenders at the provincial level. 378. Cultivation of opium poppy increased dramatically following the overthrow of the Taliban in 2001. However, there are signs that counter-narcotics strategies may be beginning to have an impact. According to the UNODC Afghanistan Opium Survey 2005, opium cultivation decreased by 21% year on year from a record high of 131,000 hectares in 2004 to 104,000 hectares.491 The report attributes this decline to several factors: the farmers’ choice to refrain from poppy cultivation, the government’s eradication programme, the ban on opium, and law enforcement activities. Nevertheless, Afghanistan remains the world’s largest supplier of opium (87%). Moreover, production in 2005 was just 2.4% lower than in 2004; favourable weather conditions resulted in a 22% higher yield. Cultivation also increased in some provinces. Explaining this trend, UNODC Executive Director Antonio Maria Costa has said that opium is the only commercially viable crop in many parts of 488 Ev 69 489 HC Deb, 15 June 2005, cols 467–8W 490 HC Deb 24 October 2005, col 73W; and FCO press release, 5 September 2005, available at: www.fco.gov.uk 491 “Afghanistan Opium Survey 2005”, UNODC, November 2005 136 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism Afghanistan: “Assistance to farmers is needed until the legal economy takes over as the mainstay of growth in Afghanistan.”492 379. The UNODC released its Opium Rapid Assessment Survey in February 2006. This survey provides an assessment of the situation at the middle of the cultivation cycle and collates information on the geographical distribution and dynamics of opium poppy cultivation and anticipated harvest times. The survey found that there was “an increasing trend in opium poppy cultivation in 13 provinces, a decreasing trend in three provinces and no change in 16 provinces as compared to the results of the Annual Opium Poppy Survey 2005.”493 380. There are reports that friction has emerged between the USA on the one hand and the British and Afghan governments on the other over the pace and extent of eradication.494 The United Kingdom approach has been to pursue eradication only where there is access to alternative livelihoods. We asked Jack Straw about this, and whether British forces would be involved in eradication in Helmand, which is one the main opium-producing provinces. He told us: We have been careful on the issue of forced eradication. We have certainly opposed aerial eradication because of its indiscriminate nature and the fact that it can eradicate other crops as well. I think it will be for the commanders on the ground, in consultation with the local authorities, to make judgments about any particular case if they come across a field full of poppies, what efforts are made to deal with that immediate problem.495 David Richmond, Director-General, Defence and Intelligence at the FCO, added: [T]here is a distinction to be made between eradication and interdiction. There is some eradication going on at this very moment in the Helmand province, but it is being carried out by the Afghan authorities themselves and I think the judgment is that eradication is best done by the Afghans, and that is indeed what is happening at the moment, but the interdiction of the actual trade in narcotics production of the opium, and so on, that is an area where I think British forces could play a role.496 This point was reiterated in a letter to us from the former Foreign Secretary in April 2006. This said: “ISAF forces will not take part in the eradication of opium poppy or in preplanned and direct military action against the drugs trade. As President Karzai has pointed out, this is a job for the Government of Afghanistan.”497 381. Another problem is the limited range of alternative livelihoods for Afghan farmers. We asked Jack Straw about this. He told us: 492 ibid 493 “Afghanistan Opium Rapid Assessment Survey”, UNODC, February 2006, available at: www.unodc.org 494 “US memo faults Afghan leader on heroin fight”, The New York Times, 22 May 2005 495 Q 253 [Mr Straw] 496 Q 253 [Mr Richmond] 497 Ev 69 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 137 A great deal of thought and money is going into the creation of alternative livelihoods in Afghanistan and it is something which we are leading on for the UK, an awful lot of work and money, and there is no doubt that the long-term solution to drugs is the general raising of living standards and the creation of alternative livelihoods, as well as creating a secure environment.498 Nevertheless, there remain few options that offer anything close to the income derived from opium poppy. This fact lies behind a controversial proposal by the Senlis Council. The Senlis Council is critical of what it describes as “aggressive strategies”, including eradication, which it says “primarily affect the most vulnerable actors of the opium economy—the farmers—destroying their livelihoods.”499 The Council argues that counter narcotics efforts have “proven largely ineffective in addressing this all-encompassing crisis—the illegal opium trade remains an impediment to sustainable development.”500 The Council’s proposal is that in the context of the global shortage of opium-based medicines, Afghanistan could license opium production: [B]y re-directing the opium poppy into the formal rural economy through the implementation of a strictly controlled opium licensing system, opium could become a major driver for a sustainable and diversified Afghan rural economy. In view of the world shortage of essential medicines, the development of an Afghan brand of morphine and codeine could also be endorsed.501 382. The Government has expressed doubts about such an approach. On 2 March 2006, Secretary of State for International Development Hilary Benn told the House: The Afghan Government has expressed its opposition to licit cultivation of opium. The Afghan Minister for Counter Narcotics, Habibullah Qaderi has said recently: “The poor security situation in the country means there can simply be no guarantee that opium will not be smuggled out of the country for the illicit narcotics trade abroad. Without an effective control mechanism, a lot of opium will still be refined into heroin for illicit markets in the west and elsewhere. We could not accept this.” The UK agrees that licensing opium cultivation in Afghanistan for medical use is not a realistic solution to its drug problem, not least because it risks a high level of diversion of licit opium into illegal channels. The production of opium is also contrary to the Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan.502 383. We reiterate our predecessor’s Committee’s conclusion that “the United Kingdom’s lead role in co-ordinating the UN’s counter-narcotics strategy in Afghanistan is one of the Government’s most important responsibilities overseas”. We conclude that negligible progress has been made reducing opium poppy cultivation in Afghanistan. We recommend that the Government set out in its response to this Report how it intends to make better progress in tackling this problem. We further 498 Q 251 [Mr Straw] 499 Defence Committee, Fifth Report of Session 2004-05, The UK deployment to Afghanistan, HC 558, Ev 53. 500 Ibid, Ev 54. 501 Ibid 502 HC Deb 2 March 2006, cols 874–5W 138 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism recommend that the Government clarify its position towards eradication and that it set out what progress has been made on developing alternative livelihoods for Afghan farmers. Role of the United Kingdom 384. In May 2006, the United Kingdom deployed the Headquarters Group of NATO’s Allied Rapid Reaction Corps (HQ ARRC Group) to Kabul to command the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) for nine months. This period coincides with the expansion of the ISAF mission to Afghanistan’s Western and Southern provinces (ISAF stage 3). As part of this expansion, the United Kingdom will deploy personnel to Helmand Province in the south of the country.503 The deployment will set up a new Britishled PRT at Lashkar Gar, the capital of Helmand Province. 385. The former Foreign Secretary wrote to us about the role of British troops in Afghanistan: They will work to counter insurgency and help the appropriate authorities build security and government institutions to continue the progress of recent years. Above all, their presence will help the Afghans create the environment in which economic development and institutional reform—both essential to the elimination of the opium industry—can take place. ISAF will be able to help with the provision of training to Afghan counter-narcotics forces and will, within means and capabilities, provide support to their operations. They will also help the Afghan Government explain their policies to the Afghan people. ISAF forces will not take part in the eradication of opium poppy or in pre-planned and direct military action against the drugs trade. As President Karzai has pointed out, this is a job for the Government of Afghanistan.504 386. Nevertheless, there is concern over both the dangers that British personnel will face and the possible blurring of their role. The former Defence Secretary admitted the size of the challenge to the House: “Southern Afghanistan is undeniably a more demanding area in which to operate than either the north or the west. The Taliban remains active. The authority of the Afghan Government—and the reach of their security forces—is still weak. The influence of the drugs traffickers, by contrast, is strong.”505 The Senlis Council has also outlined a number of concerns: British forces in southern Afghanistan are faced with the twin mission of counter insurgency and support to counter narcotics. However, in a region where opium cultivation is deeply entrenched, the war against opium could make the war against insurgency a much more difficult, probably impossible, task. It is important that the fundamental stabilisation mission of British troops is not compromised by the war against opium… The mission of the British forces in southern Afghanistan with regards to opium should be clearly defined in order to avoid any clash with the 503 www.fco.gov.uk 504 Ev 69 505 HC Deb, 26 Jan 2006, cols 1530 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 139 primary mission of counter insurgency. The terms “support” to eradication activities can take many shapes on the ground and should therefore be defined in more specific detail beforehand. In a province which is increasingly falling into the grip of Taliban and other insurgent groups, it is vital British forces win the trust of local communities by avoiding to undermine their livelihoods.506 387. In March 2006, the Defence Committee published a report on the United Kingdom’s deployment to Afghanistan. This report flagged up a number of concerns. Principal among these was the role of the deployment to Helmand: “There is a fundamental tension between the UK’s objective of promoting stability and security and its aim of implementing an effective counter-narcotics strategy. It is likely the more successful the deployment is at impeding the drugs trade, the more it will come under attack from those involved in it. In the short term at least, the security situation is likely to deteriorate.”507 Reflecting the difficult security environment in which British forces are operating, a British soldier was killed and two wounded in action against suspected Taliban forces in mid-June.508 388. The Defence Committee’s report also highlighted the relationship between ISAF and Operation Enduring Freedom. The Stage 3 expansion of ISAF takes it to areas that are the responsibility of the OEF counter-terrorism mission (ISAF’s role is explicitly aimed at stabilisation and not counter-terrorism). “It is possible that after stage 3 is completed, ISAF and OEF Forces will, on occasion, operate in the same geographical areas. Certain assets— notably air support—are shared. Effective coordination is therefore essential.”509 389. The last Report in this inquiry described plans to “increase synergy and better integrate the two operations”.510 Our predecessor Committee concluded that: “the proposal for increased synergy between and better integration of NATO’s operations in Afghanistan and those of the US-led coalition is a potentially positive move, which if correctly implemented should enhance the effectiveness of security, reconstruction and counterterrorist activities alike. However, we would not support such a process being used as cover for a significant withdrawal of US forces from the country or for a material reduction in the US commitment, unless there was a corresponding threat reduction.”511 390. In its response to this Report the Government agreed that “It will be important that achieving single mission status leads to no reduction in capability to undertake the tasks currently performed by OEF.” 512 The response also welcomed the conclusion at the February 2005 meeting of NATO Defence Ministers that NATO military authorities should produce a “detailed plan, with timelines, to implement greater synergy between the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) and US/coalition-led Operation 506 Defence Committee, Fifth Report of Session 2004-05, The UK deployment to Afghanistan, HC 558, Ev 53 507 Ibid, para 90 508 “UK soldier dies in Taleban clash”, BBC Online, 12 June 2006, news.bbc.co.uk 509 Defence Committee, Fifth Report of Session 2004-05, The UK deployment to Afghanistan, HC 558, para 35 510 HC (2004–05) 36–I, para 345 511 Ibid, para 346 512 Foreign & Commonwealth Office, Sixth Report of the Foreign Affairs Committee; Session 2004–05; Foreign Policy Aspects of the War Against Terrorism; Response of the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, Cm 6590, June 2005 140 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism Enduring Freedom (OEF).” 513 The Government also told us that the plan would be circulated to NATO allies and discussed prior to and at the NATO Defence Ministers meeting in June 2005. 391. We conclude that there is potential for a blurring of the United Kingdom’s counter-insurgency and counter-narcotics objectives in Afghanistan. We recommend that the Government clarify the role of British personnel, including with regard to the policy of eradication and support to eradication activities. We further conclude that the expansion of ISAF’s area of operation requires careful consideration of how best to coordinate with the US-led Operation Enduring Freedom. We reiterate our predecessor Committee’s conclusion that “increased synergy between and better integration of NATO’s operations in Afghanistan and those of the US-led coalition is a potentially positive move, which if correctly implemented should enhance the effectiveness of security, reconstruction and counter-terrorist activities alike”. We recommend that the Government update us in its response to this Report on NATO planning to achieve this greater synergy. 513 Ibid Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 141 9 Non-proliferation 392. The FCO has made non-proliferation of weapons of mass destruction one of its strategic priorities. In its strategy paper “Active Diplomacy for a Changing World” the FCO wrote: Preventing terrorist groups and states of concern from acquiring WMD will remain a high priority. Regional stability and the strength of the global nuclear nonproliferation regime will depend on preventing and containing destabilising military nuclear programmes. We will use the full range of non-proliferation and counterproliferation tools to do so. This includes continuing to support effective international agreements, taking part in practical multilateral action and implementing our own legal obligations.514 393. Professor Paul Wilkinson agrees about the importance of non-proliferation efforts: “In view of al Qaeda’s serious efforts to acquire [Chemical, Biological, Radiological or Nuclear] weapons much more intensive efforts are required to tighten and police the international arms control and counter-proliferation regimes to enable them to encompass prevention of proliferation to non-state groups. Far more than changes in international treaties is required. We urgently need powerful international agencies to police such regimes. The IAEA is an encouraging, though far from perfect model. We need to build similar mechanisms to deal with chemical and biological weapons.”515 The Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) 394. The chief safeguard against the proliferation of nuclear weapons is the NonProliferation Treaty (NPT). Signed in 1968, the NPT permits the possession of nuclear weapons by the USA, the United Kingdom, France, Russia and China—the Nuclear Weapons States (NWS)—and forbids other states from joining the nuclear club. In exchange, the NWS will reduce their arsenals towards eventual disarmament under Article VI of the NPT, which states: “Each of the Parties to the Treaty undertakes to pursue negotiations in good faith on effective measures relating to cessation of the nuclear arms race at an early date and to nuclear disarmament, and on a Treaty on general and complete disarmament under strict and effective international control.”516 395. The NPT enshrines states’ rights to pursue a peaceful nuclear energy programme. At present, 188 states are members of the NPT. Three states with nuclear weapons—India, Pakistan and Israel—remain outside the Treaty regime517 and North Korea has withdrawn from the NPT. 396. We asked Jack Straw about the NPT. He told us: 514 Foreign & Commonwealth Office, Active Diplomacy for a Changing World: The UK’s International Priorities, Cm 6762, March 2006 515 Ev 4 516 The Non-Proliferation Treaty, available at: www.fas.org 517 Ibid 142 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism [T]he more states that have nuclear weapons and the less the behaviour of those states is constrained by international laws and obligations, the greater the likelihood is that there will be either by accident or by design a nuclear war…While it is easy to make points that the Permanent 5 have got nuclear weapons, the Permanent 5 have nuclear weapons in historical circumstances we all know about but by international agreement, and that was the purpose of the Non-Proliferation Treaty. President Kennedy and others said in the early 1960s that if the world carried on this arms race it could by the turn of the century just gone end up with 20–30 countries with nuclear weapons and who knows what would be the consequences. That was the political origin of what became the Non-Proliferation Treaty. It was a deal between the so-called nuclear weapon states, the P5, and all others by which everybody agreed that there would be no more nuclear weapon states. In return for that, the nonnuclear weapon states would have this very clear right — it is not an unqualified right — to develop nuclear power and in certain circumstances nuclear weapon states would be able to ensure the availability of civil nuclear technology to the nonnuclear weapon states. Meanwhile, the nuclear weapon states were under an obligation to reduce their reliance on nuclear weapons.518 397. Last year, our predecessor Committee expressed the hope that the May 2005 Review Conference would strengthen the NPT, and called on the Government to encourage the USA to take steps towards disarmament.519 The Government agreed and wrote in its response to our Report: The Government is making every effort at this May’s NPT Review Conference to ensure that all three pillars of the Treaty, namely non-proliferation, peaceful uses and disarmament, are strengthened. The Government believes that strengthening each element of the NPT is in the interest of all States Parties to the Treaty. However, the Government recognises that many Non Nuclear Weapon States will need to be convinced that Nuclear Weapon states have demonstrated their ongoing commitment to their NPT Article VI obligations concerning nuclear disarmament if there is to be a constructive dialogue in other areas, in particular on non-compliance issues.520 398. Non-proliferation measures were high on the agenda at the May 2005 meeting, and included proposals limiting the production of weapons-usable material, developing nuclear energy systems that do not generate weapons-grade material, promoting multinational approaches to management of material, including the potential establishment of an international nuclear fuel bank, and the ratification of the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT) and the adoption of a Fissile Material Cut-off Treaty (FMCT).521 However, differing visions of the NPT regime crippled the May Review Conference. While the NWS contended that control of the nuclear fuel cycle was essential to prevent the proliferation of 518 Ev 196, Q 10 (Oral evidence taken before the Foreign Affairs Committee on 8 February 2006, HC (2005–06) 904–i) 519 HC (2004–05) 36–I, para 362 520 Foreign & Commonwealth Office, Sixth Report of the Foreign Affairs Committee; Session 2004–05; Foreign Policy Aspects of the War Against Terrorism; Response of the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, Cm 6590, June 2005 521 Centre for Non-proliferation Studies, “The 2005 Review Conference: Understanding the Challenges and Devising Response”, 30 October 2004 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 143 nuclear weapons, the non-nuclear weapon states (NNWS) demanded disarmament in line with Article VI, arguing that a two-tier international system of nuclear haves and have-nots was emerging.522 399. Assessing why the Conference failed, Arms Control Today wrote: The nuclear-weapon states were probably pleased to avoid any new disarmament obligations, some [Non-Aligned Members] could take satisfaction in preserving the 2000 NPT Review Conference package rather than having it supplanted by a weaker set of commitments, and Iran had to be relieved to escape without an official rebuke of its nuclear activities.523 However, the failure of the Review Conference casts serious doubt on the willingness of the five NWS to pursue disarmament measures, on the implementation of other controls over the nuclear fuel cycle put in place under the framework of the NPT, and perhaps most importantly on the future of the NPT regime itself. 400. Part of the responsibility for that failure lies with the NWS, which continue to maintain their nuclear weapons. However, the former Foreign Secretary was quick to defend the United Kingdom’s record on disarmament. Jack Straw told us: “We, in this country, have got a better record than any of the other nuclear weapon states. We have reduced the number of weapon systems from three to one. We were in the forefront of trying to secure a constructive outcome to the revision conference which took place in May of last year. I regret that no such outcome was possible but it was not for the want of trying by us.”524 However, the question of the renewal of the United Kingdom’s nuclear deterrent raises doubts about the Government’s commitment to disarmament and is the subject of a current inquiry by the Defence Committee.525 401. We conclude that the failure of the May 2005 NPT Review Conference is a matter of serious concern. We recommend that the Government do all in its power to sustain the NPT, as the most effective tool for the prevention of the proliferation of nuclear weapons. The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) 402. The adoption of the Additional Protocol on Safeguards to the NPT in 1997 gave the IAEA a crucial role in monitoring compliance with the NPT, formalising an informal process that began in 1993. The Additional Protocol established four main provisions: a much expanded provision of information to the IAEA; an expansion of the number of facilities open to IAEA inspections; improved short notice inspection thanks to speedier visa processing for inspectors; and provision for the right to use environmental sampling. 522 “Politics and Protection: Why the NPT Review Conference failed”, Disarmament Diplomacy, Acronym Institute, issue 80, Autumn 2005 523 “Nuclear non-proliferation treaty sputters”, Arms Control Today, August 2005 524 Ev 196, Q 10 (Oral evidence taken before the Foreign Affairs Committee on 8 February 2006, HC (2005–06) 904–i) 525 “The Future of the Strategic Nuclear Deterrent: the Strategic Context”, Defence Committee Press Release, January 2006 144 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism As of January 2005, 62 states had adopted Additional Protocols which were in force, while 28 had them pending.526 403. At present, the IAEA has 138 member states, whose representatives meet annually for the General Conference to elect the 35 members of the Board of Governors. The Board of Governors meets five times a year and is a consensual body which prepares decisions to be made by the General Conference. General Conference sessions are held annually in Vienna. Additionally, the IAEA supports a research centre in Trieste (Italy) that is administered by the UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO). 404. The IAEA and its Director General were jointly awarded the Nobel Peace Prize on 10 December 2005.527 At the time, Dr ElBaradei said that the award would strengthen his resolve, and in a speech to the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS) he pointed to three particular challenges facing the IAEA. These were the proliferation of nuclear material and technology, the emergence of clandestine procurement networks such as the AQ Khan network (which ran an international nuclear material and know how supply network), and progress on disarmament.528 He then outlined a six-pronged strategy to resolve the problem, calling for: • Improved control on access to the nuclear fuel cycle, since the fuel cycle is a recognised ‘choke point’, perhaps by establishing an international system of supply for nuclear fuel. • Enhanced verification measures, by expanding the membership of the Additional Protocol to the NPT Safeguards agreement, and by extending the IAEA’s authority to investigate weaponisation programmes that do not directly relate to the nuclear material. At present, the IAEA funds its verification with a budget of US$120 million, with which it oversees 900 faciliities in 71 states. • Strengthened enforcement mechanisms, by introducing a prohibition on withdrawal for states parties. • Greater protection of nuclear material, in line with legal obligations under UNSCR 1540 and the new International Convention on the Suppression of Acts of Nuclear Terrorism. Reducing the number of reactors that enrich unranium to 90% or higher, the standard necessary for nuclear weapons. • Accelerated disarmament efforts, by finalising the ratification of the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT) and starting negotiations on a Fissile Material (Cut Off) Treaty. • An alternative security strategy providing for increased sustainable development, building social, political and economic links.529 526 “The 1997 Additional Protocol at a glance”, Arms Control Association, January 2005 527 “UN watchdog receives Nobel prize”, BBC News Online, 10 December 2005, news.bbc.co.uk 528 Remarks by Mohammed ElBaradei, IISS Alistair Buchan Lecture, 6 December 2005 529 Ibid Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 145 405. We met Dr ElBaradei and other IAEA officials in Vienna in January 2006. During these meetings we heard that the IAEA may not have the tools to tackle the threat of nuclear terrorism, as it is geared towards working with states. In addition, we heard that the IAEA’s funding for dealing with non-state actors comes from ad hoc contributions, and although these are generous, this system makes it difficult to plan a budget and programme of work. We fear that without measures to improve work on non-state actors, the IAEA may be unable to limit the spread of nuclear technology or materials as effectively in the future as it has in the past. 406. We recommend that the Government set out in its response to this Report what it is doing to strengthen the non-proliferation tools available to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), and set out its views on the proposals for strengthening the IAEA put forward by Director General Dr Mohammed ElBaradei. We further recommend that the Government work with its IAEA partners to establish a permanent section of the IAEA dealing with nuclear proliferation by non-state actors, with adequate and sustainable funding arrangements. India 407. In September 2005, the USA agreed a deal with India on nuclear co-operation; President Bush and Prime Minister Singh signed the deal in February 2006. The essence of the agreement is that in exchange for civilian nuclear support from the USA, India, which remains outside the NPT regime, will divide its nuclear programmes into civilian and military sectors, sign the Additional Protocol on Safeguards, and allow IAEA inspections of its civilian sector.530 The Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG), a group of states that seeks to control nuclear proliferation through lists of controlled goods, and the US Congress, could then adopt the legislative changes required to permit civil nuclear trade (nuclear cooperation with India is currently illegal in the USA). However, the agreement faces opposition in both New Delhi and Washington, particularly from within the US Congress. 531 The NSG has also cast doubt on the deal, by refusing to approve the changes necessary to permit the export of items on trigger lists to India, despite applications by the USA.532 This agreement has enormous implications for the non-proliferation regime and we intend to consider it further in our forthcoming Inquiry into the Sub-Continent. 408. Previous efforts to reform the NSG have not succeeded fully. The FCO wrote to the Quadripartite Committee in December 2005, saying: “The UK, as G8 Presidency, played a leading role in using the G8 to try and leverage changes to the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) Guidelines. Revised proposals were put forward to establish objective criteria that a state must meet in order to receive transfers of sensitive nuclear technology, together with agreed factors that suppliers should take into account before allowing such transfers to take place. But, because of reservations on the part of a number of key suppliers, attempts to 530 “Bush promises India nuclear co-operation”, Arms Control Today, September 2005 531 “Complexity of N-deal with US throws India in a bind”, The News (Pakistan), 9 December 2005 532 “Doubts raised on US-India deal”, Financial Times, 28 March 2006 146 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism strengthen the guidelines were only partially successful. We remain committed to taking this work forward.”533 409. We recommend that the Government set out in its response to this Report what impact the agreement between New Delhi and Washington on nuclear co-operation might have on the existing non-proliferation framework. We also recommend that in its response to this Report the Government set out what progress has been made on introducing revisions to the guidelines of the Nuclear Suppliers Group. The Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT) 410. Following the end of the Cold War, and spurred on by nuclear testing moratoria introduced by Russia, France, and the USA, multilateral negotiations on a Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT) took place, concluding in August 1996. The treaty, which “prohibits any nuclear weapon test explosion or any other nuclear explosion” aims to constrain the qualitative improvement of nuclear weapons, curb proliferation, and advance disarmament. The primary purpose of the CTBT is to prevent the development of a new generation of nuclear weapons.534 411. To date, 176 states have signed and 120 have ratified the treaty. However, the CTBT will only enter into force after 44 designated ‘nuclear-capable states’ have ratified it; of the 44 states, India, Pakistan and North Korea have not signed the treaty, and only 33 have ratified the treaty. The United Kingdom has ratified the CTBT. 535 412. The CTBT verification system, managed by the CTBT Organization (CTBTO), includes the International Monitoring System (IMS), the International Data Centre, and the On-Site Inspection regime. The IMS comprises 321 monitoring stations worldwide with sensors that can detect possible nuclear explosions using four technologies—seismic, hydroacoustic, radionuclide, and infrasound. The International Data Centre collects information from the IMS and disseminates data for feedback. In the event of a suspected nuclear explosion, states can request inspection of an alleged violator under the On-Site Inspection regime, and the CTBT allows states-parties to pursue strong measures to tackle non-compliance.536 The CTBTO Preparatory Committee completed its 25th Session in 533 Evidence received by the Quadripartite Committee (Defence, Foreign Affairs, International Development, Trade and Industry), to be published as HC 873 534 “Subject resources: The Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty”, Arms Control Association 535 In total 176 States have signed the CTBT. The following 126 states have deposited their instruments of ratification of the CTBT (states with an asterisk have also ratified the CTBT): Afghanistan, Albania, Algeria*, Argentina*, Australia*, Austria*, Azerbaijan, Bahrain, Bangladesh*, Belarus, Belgium*, Belize, Benin, Bolivia, Botswana, Brazil*, Bulgaria*, Burkina Faso, Cambodia, Canada*, Chile*, Cook Islands, Costa Rica, Cote d'Ivoire, Croatia, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Democratic Republic of the Congo*, Denmark, Djibouti, Ecuador, El Salvador, Eritrea, Estonia, Fiji, Finland*, France*, Gabon, Georgia, Germany*, Greece, Grenada, Guyana, Haiti, Holy See, Honduras, Hungary*, Iceland, Ireland, Italy*, Jamaica, Japan*, Jordan, Kazakhstan, Kenya, Kiribati, Kuwait, Kyrgyzstan, Latvia, Lao People's Democratic Republic, Lesotho, Libyan Arab Jamahiriya, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Madagascar, Maldives, Mali, Malta, Mauritania, Mexico*, Micronesia (Federated States of), Monaco, Mongolia, Morocco, Namibia, Nauru, Netherlands*, New Zealand, Nicaragua, Niger, Nigeria, Norway*, Oman, Panama, Paraguay, Peru*, Philippines, Poland*, Portugal, Qatar, Republic of Korea*, Romania*, Russian Federation*, Rwanda, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Saint Lucia, Samoa, San Marino, Senegal, Serbia and Montenegro, Seychelles, Sierra Leone, Singapore, Slovakia*, Slovenia, South Africa*, Spain*, Sudan, Sweden*, Switzerland*, Tajikistan, the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Togo, Tunisia, Turkey*, Turkmenistan, Uganda, Ukraine*, United Arab Emirates, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland*, United Republic of Tanzania, Uruguay, Uzbekistan, Vanuatu and Venezuela. Israel has signed but not ratified the CTBT. 536 “The international security value of the nuclear test ban treaty”, Arms Control Today, 2 November 2002 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 147 November 2005, at which Tibor Toth, the Executive Secretary of the CTBTO Preparatory Committee, outlined the CTBTO’s work to establish an effective system of monitoring.537 413. On a visit to the CTBTO in January 2006, we saw first hand the progress which the Organisation has made towards establishing an effective and global monitoring system, and were most impressed by the confidence of the CTBTO staff that they would be able to detect almost any nuclear test worldwide. However, we also heard about the need for more states to ratify the treaty before it enters into force. Three states in particular have not ratified the treaty for technical reasons—Colombia, Indonesia, and Vietnam—but other influential states, such as the USA, are also a concern. 414. We conclude that the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT) is a crucial tool for the control of the spread of nuclear weapons, and the work of the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty Organisation (CTBTO) is both technically impressive and of great worth. We recommend that the Government urge those states that have not yet ratified the CTBT to do so, concentrating its efforts on the states which have not ratified for technical reasons, such as Colombia, Indonesia and Vietnam. Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention 415. Last year, our predecessor Committee commented that the lack of a verification mechanism for the Biological Weapons Convention was an extremely serious gap in the international non-proliferation regime, and recommended that the Government work to garner support for a verification regime, particularly from the USA. The Committee also recommended that the Government outline the most important developments relating to the BWC, in areas such as the implementation of a code of conduct for biological weapons scientists.538 416. In its response, the Government said that the United Kingdom “has always played a leading role in the negotiations and implementation of the Convention and has strongly supported all measures that would strengthen the BWC, including attempts to establish an effective verification regime.”539 However, it rejected the Committee’s calls for the establishment of a “coalition of the virtuous” which would establish a verification mechanism for the BWC, since an “optional arrangement would inevitably mean that those States about which the UK had most concerns could opt out of a protocol leaving those inside any such coalition with more onerous obligations than others, without providing us with any more security.”540 Nonetheless, we remain concerned about the lack of a verification regime. 417. Another concern is the forthcoming BWC Review Conference. The Government described current work on the BWC in its response to the last Report: 537 Press Release, Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty Organization, 2 December 2005 538 HC (2004–05) 36–I, para 391 539 Foreign & Commonwealth Office, Sixth Report of the Foreign Affairs Committee; Session 2004–05; Foreign Policy Aspects of the War Against Terrorism; Response of the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, Cm 6590, June 2005 540 Ibid 148 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism Following the 5th Review Conference in 2002 States Party agreed a three-year programme of work leading up to the 6th Review Conference in 2006. This programme consists of annual meetings of technical experts and representatives of the States Party to “discuss and promote common understanding and effective action” on a number of specific issues. Meetings in 2003 and 2004 were successful. The UK (John Freeman, Ambassador to the Conference on Disarmament, Geneva) is chairing the international meetings during 2005. The topic in 2005 is “the content, promulgation, and adoption of codes of conduct for scientists”. It is too early to know what can be achieved in 2005, but the Government hopes to ensure the fullest possible exchange of views between States Party and science stakeholders in the expert session in June, so that the discussion by States Party later in the year can lead to a successful outcome.541 418. Daniel Feakes from the University of Sussex and other academics raised concerns about the BWC Review Conference. He wrote to us saying: “It is essential that states parties carry out a comprehensive and effective review of the treaty at the 2006 Review Conference, as this has not been achieved since the 3rd Review conference in 1991 (the 5th review conference (2001) could not even adopt a final declaration, while the 4th Review Conference focused on the negotiations for the compliance protocol, which subsequently failed)…A successful outcome is vital to avoid the risk that the BWC may be seriously undermined at a time when biological weapons are recognised as a growing threat to international security. It is therefore imperative that constructive preparations and consultations for this year’s review conference begin as early as possible.”542 We agree that a successful review conference is crucial to maintain international confidence both in the BWC and—after the failure of the NPT review conference—in the existing nonproliferation framework in general. 419. We conclude that a successful outcome of the Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention (BWC) Review Conference is essential in order to preserve confidence in the global non-proliferation regime. We recommend that the Government outline what progress has been made by the various meetings of experts and state parties since the middle of 2005, and set out what it hopes to achieve at the Review Conference. We also recommend that the Government explain how it proposes to ensure compliance with the BWC without the existence of a verification mechanism. Chemical Weapons Convention 420. Our predecessor Committee concluded that the United Kingdom’s continued support for the Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC) is essential, and recommended that the Government continue to proceed with its chemical weapons disarmament programme, in compliance with all terms of the CWC. The Committee also recommended that the Government offer support to states that lack capacity in the implementation of the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) Action Plan.543 The 541 Foreign & Commonwealth Office, Sixth Report of the Foreign Affairs Committee; Session 2004–05; Foreign Policy Aspects of the War Against Terrorism; Response of the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, Cm 6590, June 2005 542 Ev 191 543 HC (2004–05) 36–I, para 391 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 149 Government said in its response that it offers full support to the OPCW’s Action Plan on National Implementation Measures, and that it works to support states without capacity in the adoption of the Action Plan through the EU, and has made technical assistance visits to Ethiopia and Cambodia.544 421. At present, 175 states are full members of the CWC, and universal adoption is becoming a realistic goal for the CWC. However, gaps still exist in the CWC regime; for instance, a number of Middle Eastern states, such as Egypt, Israel, Lebanon, and Syria, have not ratified the convention; other problems are in the implementation of the CWC, including the slow pace of destruction of chemical weapons by some states, such as the Russian Federation and the USA.545 422. We conclude that universality of the Chemical Weapons Convention is a most desirable objective, and we recommend that the Government step up its efforts to encourage Middle Eastern states such as Egypt, Israel, Lebanon, and Syria to ratify the CWC. We also conclude that the destruction of chemical weapons is a priority, and recommend that the Government urge other states to accelerate the destruction of their chemical weapons. The G8 Global Partnership 423. The G8 Global Partnership against the Spread of Weapons and Materials of Mass Destruction seeks to secure and destroy WMD, particularly in the former Soviet Union. The Partnership was launched in June 2002 at the G8 summit at Kananaskis in Canada, when the G8 states pledged ‘10 plus 10 over 10’—US$10 billion from the USA and US$10 billion from the other member states over the next ten years to manage Russia’s WMD legacy. 424. A joint statement issued by the G8 at Kananaskis in 2002 stated: Under this initiative, we will support specific cooperation projects, initially in Russia, to address non-proliferation, disarmament, counter-terrorism and nuclear safety issues. Among our priority concerns are the destruction of chemical weapons, the dismantlement of decommissioned nuclear submarines, the disposition of fissile materials and the employment of former weapons scientists. We will commit to raise up to US$20 billion to support such projects over the next ten years.546 Last year, our predecessor Committee concluded that “the ongoing work under the G8 Global Partnership is of critical importance, and we strongly support the Government's efforts to improve the security of the former Soviet’s WMD stockpile and to have it rendered non-harmful.”547 The Committee also expressed support for the Government’s 544 Foreign & Commonwealth Office, Sixth Report of the Foreign Affairs Committee; Session 2004–05; Foreign Policy Aspects of the War Against Terrorism; Response of the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, Cm 6590, June 2005 545 “OPCW director seeks Middle East inroads”, Arms Control Today, November 2005 546 Statement by G8 Leaders, Kananaskis Summit, 27 June 2002, available at: www.g7.utoronto.ca/summit 547 HC (2004–05) 36–I, para 388 150 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism work at the Schuch’ye chemical weapons destruction facility in the Russian Federation, but raised concerns about the plutonium disposition programme.548 425. Outlining the scope of the G8 Global Initiative’s focus, the FCO wrote in its response to the Report: The UK’s programme is expected to remain focused for the next few years on making spent nuclear fuel safe and secure, assisting in the redirection of weapons scientists and technicians, enhancing security and nuclear facilities, reducing stockpiles of weapon grade plutonium and chemical weapons destruction.549 The Government also agreed with the concerns about the slow progress on the plutonium disposition project.550 426. The 2005 Annual Report on the G8 Global Partnership from the FCO, DTI and MOD, assessed progress over the last year, during the United Kingdom’s Presidency of the G8 and its chairmanship of the Global Partnership Working Group, saying: “As well as ensuring the momentum of the Global Partnership has been maintained during 2005, the [Working] Group carried out a detailed review of priorities to ensure that the Kananakaskis Priorities were still broadly correct. The Group’s work has further enhanced the good working relationships that have developed between donors and beneficiaries. The Group has also helped to address the concerns over taxation and access that had some impact on earlier projects.”551 427. The Annual Report states that the Global Partnership has managed the dismantlement of two Oscar class nuclear submarines; maintained work to establish a storage site for spent nuclear fuel at the Atomflot site in Murmansk; secured US$210 million to maintain the Chernobyl storage facility and developed support projects for the Schhuch’ye Chemical Weapons Destruction Facility, among other projects.552 The Partnership has also expanded membership and continues to grow in momentum, according to the Annual Report. However, the plutonium disposition programme is not yet in place, which raises continued fears of the acquisition of radiological material by terrorist groups; expansion of its work beyond the FSU to cover other WMD materials attractive to terrorist groups would strengthen the effectiveness of the Global Partnership. 428. We conclude that the work of the G8 Global Partnership makes a valuable contribution to the reduction of nuclear and chemical weapons material in the former Soviet Union, although the slow progress on plutonium and chemical weapon destruction is a serious concern. We recommend that the Government set out in its response to this Report how it will maintain the momentum behind the G8 Global 548 HC (2004–05) 36–I, para 388 549 Foreign & Commonwealth Office, Sixth Report of the Foreign Affairs Committee; Session 2004–05; Foreign Policy Aspects of the War Against Terrorism; Response of the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, Cm 6590, June 2005 550 Ibid 551 Foreign & Commonwealth Office, Department of Trade and Industry, and Ministry of Defence, The G8 Global Partnership; Third Annual Report 2005, p 4 552 Ibid, p 5 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 151 Partnership. We also recommend that it explore the possibilities of expanding the Partnership’s work beyond the borders of the former Soviet Union. The Missile Technology Control Regime 429. Established in 1987, the MTCR has 34 members who restrict their exports of missile technology. The states parties implement export controls on missile technology, according to certain criteria. These are; whether the intended recipient is working towards a WMD programme; the purposes of the missiles and space programmes; potential contribution to the recipients WMD delivery capacity; and whether a transfer would conflict with any multilateral treaty. The MTCR is voluntary and has no penalties for transfers, although the USA identifies any states or entities in breach of the MTCR as proliferators. 430. Last year, our Predecessor Committee concluded “we recommend that the Government set out in its response to this Report what it is doing to encourage other states, such as China, to conform to MTCR standards.”553 In its Response, the Government wrote: The Government takes every appropriate opportunity to lobby in support of the MTCR in bilateral contacts on export controls. For those states that lack the legal and regulatory infrastructure to implement and enforce effective export controls the UK also has an active export control outreach programme. This helps the Government to build the links that facilitate an exchange of information and allows the UK to promote the benefits of export controls and the MTCR. Officials carry out a number of outward and inward outreach visits each year, the most recent being an inward visit from China.554 431. At its latest Plenary Meeting, the MTCR re-emphasised the impact of UNSCR 1540, which obliges states to take measures to control the transfer of missile technology, and welcomed India’s decision to adhere to MTCR guidelines on a unilateral basis. Work on the growing complexity of dual use technologies also took place, given the growing trend of trade in high technology which could have applications on missile construction. Technological ability is most visible in the proliferation of cruise missile technology and in the growing number of space programmes around the world, of which China’s is perhaps most notable.555 432. We welcome the Government’s outreach work on the Missile Technology Control Regime (MTCR) and we recommend that in its response to this Report the Government set out what further steps it is planning to take in this area. We also welcome India’s decision to comply with MTCR guidelines voluntarily, and we recommend that the Government work to encourage India to become a full member of the MTCR. However, we conclude that the spread of knowledge of cruise missile and space programme related technology may outpace the MTCR’s best efforts, and we recommend that the Government set out in its response to this Report how it will 553 HC (2004–05) 36–I, para 420 554 Foreign & Commonwealth Office, Sixth Report of the Foreign Affairs Committee; Session 2004–05; Foreign Policy Aspects of the War Against Terrorism; Response of the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, Cm 6590, June 2005 555 “Land attack cruise missiles pose growing threat”, Defense News, April 2006 152 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism ensure that the MTCR keeps pace with the spread of technology and what steps it will take to give the MTCR greater enforceability. The Wassenaar Arrangement 433. The Wassenaar Arrangement, formally established in July 1996, is a voluntary export control regime whose members exchange information on transfers of conventional weapons and dual-use goods and technologies. Through such exchanges, Wassenaar aims to promote “greater responsibility” among its members in exports of weapons and dualuse goods and to prevent “destabilizing accumulations”. To promote transparency, Wassenaar calls on states to make a series of voluntary information exchanges and notifications on their export activities related to weapons and items appearing on the arrangement’s two control lists. 434. Although Wassenaar has overcome initial difficulties, problems persist. Foremost among these is the fact that members are divided over its role, primarily over whether the arrangement should be more than a body for exchanging information; Wassenaar operates by consensus, so any state can block a proposal. Additionally, no consensus exists on which countries are “states of concern” or what constitutes a “destabilising” transfer. Another limiting factor is the fact that some major arms exporters—such as Belarus, China, and Israel—are not members.556 However, the arrangement has made recent efforts to tackle the problem of terrorism by agreeing on non-binding criteria to guide exports of shoulderfired, surface-to-air missiles, formally referred to as Man-Portable Air Defence Systems (MANPADS), which are a weapon well suited to terrorist groups, as well as endorsing voluntary best practices for disposing of surplus military equipment, enforcing national export controls, and controlling Very Sensitive dual-use exports. 557 435. The FCO wrote to the Quadripartite Committee outlining recent progress by the Wassenaar Arrangement, pointing to work to keep up with developments in technology, amendments to the trigger lists, including items of interest to terrorists such as jamming equipment and unmanned aerial vehicles, and the admission of South Africa to the arrangement. Commenting on its other work on small arms, the Government also told the Quadripartite Committee about its work in 2005 to destroy over 100,000 small arms and light weapons in Bosnia, Belarus, Ukraine, and Mozambique, as well as its funding of United Nations Development Programme initiatives on weapons destruction.558 436. We had an opportunity to meet the Secretary General of the Wassenaar Arrangement, Sune Danielsson, on a visit to Vienna in January 2006, where we learnt that the Wassenaar Arrangement is not represented in meetings at the UN. Notwithstanding the progress outlined above, we fear that a lack of engagement with the UN could limit the arrangement’s ability to cooperate with important international bodies charged with dealing with small arms at a time when moves towards the establishment of an international Arms Trade Treaty (ATT) are underway. 556 Arms Control Association, The Wassenaar Arrangement at a glance, January 2005 557 Press Release, Wassenaar Arrangement, December 2005 558 Evidence received by the Quadripartite Committee (Defence, Foreign Affairs, International Development, Trade and Industry), to be published as HC 873 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 153 437. We welcome the expansion of the Wassenaar Arrangement, both in terms of membership and its trigger lists, but fear that the organisation will continue to work at the lowest common denominator. We recommend that the Government explore means to strengthen the Wassenaar Arrangement, perhaps by establishing an inspections regime. We also conclude that the lack of interaction between the Wassenaar Arrangement and UN bodies dealing with small arms and light weapons hinders the effective implementation of an international non-proliferation regime on small arms and might have a deleterious impact on the establishment of an Arms Trade Treaty (ATT). We recommend that the Government work to bring the Wassenaar Arrangement into closer collaboration with the UN and other international efforts related to the ATT. The Arms Trade Treaty 438. Last year, the Quadripartite Committee commented on the prospects of the Arms Trade Treaty (ATT), and concluded: “While we cannot realistically expect an International Arms Trade Treaty to happen immediately, the UK's language and action must keep the pressure on other nations to add their weight to this initiative. This is the start of a long road, and the UK will need to be a vital driving force if the endeavour is to be successful. We urge the UK Government to use its influence as President of the G8 in 2005 to lobby other countries, particularly fellow G8 members, to support the proposed International Arms Trade Treaty.”559 439. In a letter to the Quadripartite Committee in December 2005, the FCO described progress on an Arms Trade Treaty, saying: The Government has been actively pursuing the initiative for an international Arms Trade Treaty during the UK’s Presidencies of the G8 and of the EU. At Gleneagles in July, Leaders of the G8 agreed that the “development of international standards in arms transfers…would be an important step toward tackling the undesirable proliferation of conventional arms”. On 3 October European Union Foreign Ministers added the EU’s voice to the growing support for an international treaty to establish common standards for the global trade in conventional arms, and called for the start of a formal negotiation process at the United Nations at the earliest opportunity. The Committee may also wish to note that, on 27 November, Commonwealth Heads of Government meeting in Malta added their support to calls for work on such a treaty to commence in the UN. We are now working to generate further support for such a process among international partners in order to build momentum towards our objective of beginning initial discussions in the UN later in 2006.560 440. We welcome progress towards an international ATT and recommend that the Government continue its work to garner support for such a treaty. However, we 559 Defence, Foreign Affairs, International Development and Trade and Industry Committees, First Joint Report of Session 2004–05, Strategic Export Controls; HMG’s Annual Report for 2003, Licensing Policy and Parliamentary Scrutiny, HC 145, para 161 560 Evidence received by the Quadripartite Committee (Defence, Foreign Affairs, International Development, Trade and Industry), to be published as HC 873 154 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism recommend that the Government does not allow its desire to establish internationally accepted norms lead to a treaty that operates only at the lowest common denominator. Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 155 Formal minutes Wednesday 21 June 2006 Members present: Mike Gapes, in the Chair Mr Fabian Hamilton Mr David HeathcoatAmory Mr John Horam Mr Eric Illsley Andrew Mackinlay Mr John Maples Sandra Osborne Mr Greg Pope Mr Ken Purchase Sir John Stanley Gisela Stuart Richard Younger-Ross The Committee deliberated. Draft Report [Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism], proposed by the Chairman, brought up and read. Ordered, That the draft Report be read a second time, paragraph by paragraph. Paragraphs 1 and 2 read and agreed to. Paragraphs 3 to 5 read, amended and agreed to. Paragraphs 6 to 29 read and agreed to. Paragraph 30 read, amended and agreed to. Paragraphs 31 to 35 read and agreed to. A paragraph—(Mr John Maples)—brought up, read the first and second time, amended and inserted (now paragraph 36). Paragraphs 36 and 37 (now paragraphs 37 and 38) read and agreed to. Paragraph 38 (now paragraph 39) read, amended and agreed to. Paragraph 39 read and postponed. Paragraphs 40 to 43 (now paragraphs 41 to 44) read and agreed to. Paragraph 44 (now paragraph 45) read, amended and agreed to. Paragraph 45 read, as follows: We conclude that while recent statements by the Northern Ireland Secretary and Attorney-General that Guantánamo Bay is unacceptable and must be closed down are welcome, the Government’s overall policy on Guantánamo Bay remains unclear. 156 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism We further conclude that the existence of the prison complex at Guantánamo Bay is diminishing US moral authority, and adds to the grievances against the USA and its partners in the ‘war against terrorism’; as such, detentions without either national or international authority work against US as well as British interests and hinder the effective pursuit of the ‘war against terrorism’. We recommend that the Government as a whole make this clear to its US partners at the highest level, and do so publicly. Motion made, to leave out paragraph 45 and to insert the following new paragraph: We acknowledge that there is a problem of what to do with the detainees at Guantánamo and that those detained include some very dangerous terrorists, who it is not possible to treat as ordinary criminals in the US courts. We also conclude that the continuing existence of Guantánamo diminishes US moral authority and adds to the list of grievances against the US. We conclude that those who can be reasonably safely released should be released, those who can be prosecuted as criminals should be prosecuted and that as many others as possible should be returned to their countries of citizenship. We commend the British government for its policy of quietly urging the US government to move towards closing Guantánamo.—(Mr John Maples) Ordered, That the paragraph be read a second time. Amendments made. Original Question put. The Committee divided. Ayes, 8 Noes, 3 Mr David HeathcoatAmory Mr John Horam Andrew Mackinlay Mr John Maples Mr Greg Pope Mr Ken Purchase Sir John Stanley Ms Gisela Stuart Mr Eric Illsley Sandra Osborne Richard Younger-Ross Paragraph inserted (now paragraph 46). Postponed paragraph 39 (now paragraph 40) again read, amended and agreed to. Paragraph 46 (now paragraph 47) read, amended and agreed to. Paragraph 48 read, as follows: Commenting on the lawfulness of extraordinary rendition, Professor Philippe Sands told us: “[T]here is no international lawyer of whom I am aware who would say that it is justifiable in any circumstances for a State to extra-judicially or extra-legally take Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 157 someone off the streets, remove them to another country and subject them to treatment, forms of interrogation which may amount to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or torture within the meaning of the 1984 Convention against Torture.” He went on to say: “under the 1984 Convention against Torture Inhuman and Degrading Treatment, all States parties, including this government, which takes its international responsibilities seriously, have a positive duty to investigate allegations of wrongdoing of this kind. To the best of my knowledge there has not yet been a full investigation of that kind and such an investigation is required where there is credible evidence.” Paragraph disagreed to. Paragraph 49 read, amended and agreed to. Paragraph 50 read and agreed to. Paragraph 51 read, as follows: Allegations have also arisen of British complicity in the process of rendition. Reports in the Guardian newspaper in September 2005 said: “Aircraft involved in the operations have flown into the UK at least 210 times since 9/11, an average of one flight a week. The 26-strong fleet run by the CIA have used 19 British airports and RAF bases, including Heathrow, Gatwick, Birmingham, Luton, Bournemouth and Belfast. The favourite destination is Prestwick, which CIA aircraft have flown into and out from more than 75 times. Glasgow has seen 74 flights, and RAF Northolt 33.” Paragraph disagreed to. Paragraph 52 (now paragraph 51) read and agreed to. A paragraph—(The Chairman)—brought up, read the first and second time and inserted (now paragraph 52). Paragraphs 53 and 54 read, amended and agreed to. Paragraph 55, read, amended, divided and agreed to (now paragraphs 55 and 57). Paragraph 56 (now paragraph 58) read and agreed to. Paragraph 57 read, amended, agreed to and moved (now paragraph 56). Paragraph 58 read, as follows: We conclude that the controversy over extraordinary rendition is causing serious and lasting damage to the reputation of the USA. It is also damaging its allies, including the United Kingdom. We recommended last year that the Government end its policy of obfuscation on the issue of extraordinary rendition. Unfortunately, we have since been obliged to press repeatedly for greater co-operation from the FCO. We reiterate our strong view that the Government must deal with extraordinary rendition in a transparent manner with timely answers to questions from this Committee. We conclude that it is regrettable that far more detailed information has been given in parliamentary answers to opposition party spokesmen than has been given in response to questions from this Committee. 158 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism Motion made, to leave out paragraph 58 and to insert the following new paragraph: We conclude that there has been a lot of speculation about the possible use of rendition to countries where torture can take place, so called ‘Black Sites’ and the complicity of the British Government, all of which would be very serious matters, but that there has been no hard evidence of the truth of any of these allegations. We accept the denials of the British and US governments that neither UK airspace, or airports have been used by the US government for rendition.—(Mr John Maples) Ordered, That the paragraph be read a second time. Amendments made. Original Question put and agreed to. Paragraph, as amended, inserted (now paragraph 58). Paragraphs 59 to 65 read and agreed to. Paragraph 66 read, as follows: We conclude that despite the reforms adopted by the 2005 UN General Summit, there remain uncertainties over the international legal framework for humanitarian intervention. We recommend that the Government set out in its response to this Report what steps it is taking to establish a consensus on when intervention on humanitarian grounds is permissible. Amendment proposed, to leave out from the beginning to “We” in line 3 and to insert the words: “We conclude that, in a complex globalising world, the United Kingdom has a strong interest in an international legal framework of rules governing the use of force, which is adhered to by all. In our view the Prime Minister has appeared, on some interpretations, to question the adequacy of the existing laws, particularly in relation to anticipatory self-defence. We conclude that the rules should not be changed except for humanitarian intervention.”—(John Horam) Question put, That the Amendment be made. The Committee divided. Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism Ayes, 1 Noes, 11 Mr John Horam Mr Fabian Hamilton Mr David HeathcoatAmory Mr Eric Illsley Andrew Mackinlay Mr John Maples Sandra Osborne Mr Greg Pope Mr Ken Purchase Sir John Stanley Ms Gisela Stuart Richard Younger-Ross 159 An Amendment made. Paragraph, as amended, agreed to. Paragraphs 67 to 119 read and agreed to. Paragraph 120 read, amended and agreed to. Paragraphs 121 to 127 read and agreed to. Paragraph 128 read, amended and agreed to. Paragraphs 129 to 138 read and agreed to. Paragraph 139 read, amended and agreed to. A paragraph—(Andrew Mackinlay)—brought up, read the first and second time, amended and inserted (now paragraph 140). Paragraphs 140 to 166 (now paragraphs 141 to 167) read and agreed to. Paragraph 167 (now paragraph 168) read, amended and agreed to. Paragraphs 168 to 183 (now paragraphs 169 to 184) read and agreed to. Paragraphs 184 and 185 (now paragraphs 185 and 186) read, amended and agreed to. A paragraph—(Sir John Stanley)—brought up, read the first and second time, amended and inserted (now paragraph 187). Paragraphs 186 to 193 (now paragraphs 188 to 195) read and agreed to. Paragraph 194 (now paragraph 196) read, amended and agreed to. Paragraphs 195 to 198 (now paragraphs 197 to 200) read and agreed to. 160 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism Paragraph 199 (now paragraph 201) read, amended and agreed to. Paragraph 200 (now paragraph 202) read and agreed to. Paragraphs 201 to 204 (now paragraphs 203 to 206) read, amended and agreed to. Paragraphs 205 to 210 (now paragraphs 207 to 212) read and agreed to. A paragraph—(Sir John Stanley)—brought up, read the first and second time, amended and inserted (now paragraph 213). Paragraphs 211 to 215 (now paragraphs 214 to 218) read and agreed to. Paragraphs 216 and 217 (now paragraphs 219 and 220) read, amended and agreed to. Paragraph 218 (now paragraph 221) read and agreed to. Paragraph 219 (now paragraph 222) read, amended and agreed to. Paragraphs 220 to 237 (now paragraphs 223 to 240) read and agreed to. A paragraph—(Sandra Osborne)—brought up, read the first and second time, amended and inserted (now paragraph 241). Paragraphs 238 to 241 (now paragraphs 242 to 245) read and agreed to. Paragraphs 242 and 243 (now paragraphs 246 and 247) read, amended and agreed to. Paragraphs 244 to 260 (now paragraphs 248 to 264) read and agreed to. Paragraph 261 (now paragraph 265) read, amended and agreed to. Paragraphs 262 and 263 (now paragraphs 266 and 267) read and agreed to. Paragraph 264 (now paragraph 268) read, amended and agreed to. Paragraphs 265 to 270 (now paragraphs 269 to 274) read and agreed to. Paragraph 271 (now paragraph 275) read, amended and agreed to. Paragraphs 272 to 281 (now paragraphs 276 to 285) read and agreed to. Paragraph 282 (now paragraph 286) read, amended and agreed to. Paragraphs 283 to 292 (now paragraphs 287 to 296) read and agreed to. Paragraph 293 read, as follows: We conclude that Iran is a country of major geo-strategic significance and political, economic and energy importance, which presents the United Kingdom and its allies with a serious diplomatic challenge. We recommend that the Government ensure that sufficient resources and expertise on Iran are available both to the Embassy in Tehran and in London. Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 161 Paragraph disagreed to. Paragraphs 294 to 299 (now paragraphs 297 to 302) read and agreed to. Paragraph 300 (now paragraph 303) read, amended and agreed to. Paragraphs 301 to 308 (now paragraphs 304 to 311) read and agreed to. Paragraph 309 (now paragraph 312) read, amended and agreed to. Paragraphs 310 to 319 (now paragraphs 313 to 322) read and agreed to. Paragraph 320 (now paragraph 323) read, amended and agreed to. Paragraphs 321 to 328 (now paragraphs 324 to 331) read and agreed to. Paragraph 329 (now paragraph 332) read, amended and agreed to. Paragraphs 330 to 336 (now paragraphs 333 to 339) read and agreed to. Paragraph 337 read, as follows: We conclude that military action against Iran would be likely to unleash a host of extremely serious consequences both in the Middle East and elsewhere and would not be guaranteed to prevent Iran from developing nuclear weapons in the long term. We further conclude that the Government should not undertake military action against Iran until all other options have been exhausted or without broad agreement among its international allies. We also conclude that the lack of international consensus for sanctions against Iran combined with the extremely worrying prospect of military action mean that all possible diplomatic efforts must be applied to reaching a negotiated agreement with Iran; we recommend that the Government make this point absolutely clear to the administration in Washington. An Amendment made. Another Amendment proposed, in line 5, to leave out from “exhausted” to “We” in line 6. —(Sir John Stanley) Question put, That the Amendment be made. The Committee divided. Ayes, 4 Noes, 5 Andrew Mackinlay Mr Greg Pope Sir John Stanley Ms Gisela Stuart Mr David HeathcoatAmory Mr John Horam Mr John Maples Sandra Osborne Mr Ken Purchase Paragraph, as amended, agreed to (now paragraph 340). 162 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism Paragraphs 338 to 346 (now paragraphs 341 to 349) read and agreed to. A paragraph—(Andrew Mackinlay)—brought up, read the first and second time and inserted (now paragraph 350). Paragraphs 347 and 348 (now paragraphs 351 and 352) read and agreed to. Paragraph 349 (now paragraph 353) read, amended and agreed to. Paragraphs 350 and 351 (now paragraphs 354 and 355) read and agreed to. Paragraph 352 read, as follows: There are also concerns over the shortcomings of the democratic process in Iran. Elections to the Majlis (parliament) in 2004 were deeply flawed. The Guardian Council, an unelected body that constitutionally ‘interprets’ Islamic orthodoxy, barred around 2,500 of the 8,200 prospective candidates, including 87 existing members, from standing. After a request by Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei that it review the bans, the Council made minimal changes and warned that any further challenge to its ruling would be “making war on God”. Nearly 1,200 more candidates withdrew in protest. Amendment proposed, in line 2, to leave out the words “deeply flawed” and to insert the words “so deeply flawed as to make it a wholly illegitimate and bogus parliamentary assembly.” —(Andrew Mackinlay) Question put, That the Amendment be made. The Committee divided. Ayes, 1 Noes, 8 Andrew Mackinlay Mr Fabian Hamilton Mr David HeathcoatAmory Mr John Horam Mr John Maples Sandra Osborne Mr Greg Pope Mr Ken Purchase Ms Gisela Stuart Paragraph agreed to (now paragraph 356). Paragraphs 353 to 355 (now paragraphs 356 to 358) read and agreed to. A paragraph—(Andrew Mackinlay)—brought, read the first and second time, amended and inserted (now paragraph 359). Paragraph 356 read, as follows: Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 163 We conclude that the human rights situation in Iran remains extremely unsatisfactory. We recommend that the Government continue to use its diplomatic contacts with the Iranian government to promote respect for human rights and political and religious freedoms, and actively encourage the EU to do likewise. We further conclude that the democratic process in Iran is deeply flawed, and that although this issue must be handled with care, there is a role for the United Kingdom and the international community more broadly in supporting reform efforts. We recommend that the Government seriously consider funding a Farsi BBC television service. Amendment proposed, in line 1, to leave out the words “extremely unsatisfactory” and to insert the words “quite simply appalling”.—(Andrew Mackinlay) Question put, That the Amendment be made. The Committee divided. Ayes, 1 Noes, 8 Andrew Mackinlay Mr Fabian Hamilton Mr David HeathcoatAmory Mr John Horam Mr John Maples Sandra Osborne Mr Greg Pope Mr Ken Purchase Ms Gisela Stuart Another Amendment proposed, in line 5, to leave out from “likewise.” to “We” in line 8. —(Andrew Mackinlay) Question, That the Amendment be made, put and negatived. Paragraph agreed to (now paragraph 361). Paragraphs 357 to 426 (now paragraphs 362 to 431) read and agreed to. Paragraph 427 (now paragraph 432) read, amended and agreed to. Paragraphs 428 to 435 (now paragraphs 433 to 440) read and agreed to. Resolved, That the Report, as amended, be the Fourth Report of the Committee to the House. Ordered, That the Chairman do make the Report to the House. Ordered, That the provisions of Standing Order No. 134 (Select Committees (reports)) be applied to the Report. Several Papers were ordered to be appended to the Minutes of Evidence. 164 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism Ordered, That the Appendices to the Minutes of Evidence taken before the Committee be reported to the House.—(The Chairman). The Committee further deliberated. [Adjourned till Wednesday 28 June at Two o’clock Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism 165 List of witnesses Wednesday 19 October 2005 Page Professor Paul Wilkinson, Professor of International Relations and Chair of the Centre for the Study of Terrorism and Political Violence, University of St Andrews and Mr Peter Taylor, BBC (Panorama) Ev 4 Nomi Bar-Yaacov, Independent Analyst, former Research Fellow for Conflict Management and Head of the Middle East Conflict Management Programme, International Institute for Strategic Studies Ev 13 Monday 24 October 2005 Mr Jack Straw, a Member of the House, Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, Mr David Richmond CMG, Director General, Defence and Intelligence, and Dr Peter Gooderham, Director, Middle East and North Africa Ev 20 Wednesday 2 November 2005 Mr Frank Gardner OBE, Security Correspondent, BBC Ev 38 Dr Mai Yamani, Research Fellow, Middle East Programme, Chatham House Ev 45 Wednesday 15 March 2006 Rt Hon Jack Straw MP, a Member of the House, Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, Mr David Richmond CMG, Director-General, Defence and Intelligence, and Dr Peter Gooderham, Director, Middle East and North Africa Ev 52 Wednesday 29 March 2006 Mr Yahia Said, Research Fellow, London School of Economics and Mr Zaki Chehab, Political Editor, Al Hayat TV Ev 70 Wednesday 19 April 2006 Professor Philippe Sands QC Ev 80 Sir Christopher Meyer KCMG, former Ambassador to Washington Ev 90 Wednesday 8 February 2006 Mr Jack Straw, a Member of the House, Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, and Mr David Landsman OBE, Head of CounterProliferation Department, Foreign and Commonwealth Office. Ev 194 166 Foreign Policy Aspects of the War against Terrorism List of written evidence Professor Paul Wilkinson Ev 1 Foreign and Commonwealth Office: Supplementary evidence and correspondence Ev 36, Ev 68, Ev 101, Ev 147, Ev 148, Ev 150, Ev 203 Professor Philippe Sands QC Ev 100 Letter to Clive Stafford Smith, Legal Director, Reprieve, from the Clerk of the Committee Ev 151 Reprieve Ev 151 European Coalition for Israel Ev 157 Funding for Peace Coalition Ev 166 Dr Waheed Hamzah Hadhem Ev 169 Professor Robert Springborg, School of Oriental and African Studies Ev 178 Board of Deputies of British Jews and the Community Security Trust Ev 181 Neil Partrick, Economist Group Ev 184 Daniel Feakes, University of Sussex Ev 190 Letter to Mr Alaeddin Boroujerdi, Islamic Consultative Assembly, from the Chairman of the Committee Ev 203 3240461001 Page Type [SO] 27-06-06 00:33:14 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Ev 1 Oral evidence Taken before the Foreign Affairs Committee on Wednesday 19 October 2005 Members present: Mike Gapes, in the Chair Mr Fabian Hamilton Mr John Horam Mr Paul Keetch Mr Andrew Mackay Andrew Mackinlay Mr John Maples Sandra Osborne Mr Greg Pope Mr Ken Purchase Sir John Stanley Ms Gisela Stuart Richard Younger-Ross Written evidence submitted by Professor Paul Wilkinson Is Al Qaeda Still an Organisation? 1. Al Qaeda is a transnational movement of “ism” rather than a traditional highly centralised and tightly controlled terrorist organisation. Its worldwide network of networks is bound together with a shared ideology, strategic goals, modus operandi and fanatical hatred of the US and other Western countries, Israel, and the government of the regimes of Muslim countries which Al Qaeda’s leaders accuse of being “apostates” on the grounds that they “betray” the “true Islam” as defined by bin Laden. 2. This network of networks consisting of aYliated groups, operational cells and support networks in over 60 countries gives the Al Qaeda movement a greater global reach than any previous international terrorist network. It also provides Al Qaeda with the flexibility and resilience to adapt and sustain its global jihad in spite of the many severe blows the movement has suVered. Al Qaeda’s core leadership, communication and training capabilities suVered major disruption and damage when the Taleban regime in Afghanistan, which had provided Al Qaeda with safe haven, was overthrown in autumn 2001. Since 9/11, 15 leading Al Qaeda militants have been captured or killed, and over 3,000 suspected Al Qaeda followers have been arrested or detained. Moreover, millions of pounds of Al Qaeda assets have been frozen in the banking system. Yet despite all these setbacks the movement has continued to recruit and raise more funds worldwide and to commit atrocities such as the bomb attacks in Madrid and London, massive suicide bombings in Iraq and the beheading of hostages. 3. It is a dangerous illusion to assume that because Al Qaeda’s core leadership does not carry out the detailed planning, organisation and implementation of all the attacks carried out in its name the movement no longer exists or has a purely marginal role. Bin Laden and Ayman Zawahiri provide the crucial ideological leadership and strategic direction of the movement. It is they who inspire new recruits to join the global jihad and to be ready to sacrifice their lives as suicide bombers for the cause. Al Qaeda videotapes and websites demonstrate the great importance they attach to propaganda. Recently they have expanded into broadcasting their own news programme called Voice of the Caliphate which attempts to use world events to put over their movements’ perverted doctrines. Al Qaeda’s leaders are well aware that they cannot rely on the mosques as the sole channel for spreading their ideas. Clear evidence that they continue to win the hearts and minds of those who are attracted to joining Al Qaeda aYliated and cells around the world is the way the websites of these aYliated groups swiftly claim the Al Qaeda connection in their claims of responsibility for attacks, and the Al Qaeda core leadership are so quick to claim “ownership” for successful attacks. However, there are some clear risks involved in this decentralised network of networks structure. What happens if there is a schism over strategy and tactics between leadership and one of the aYliated? And what happens if a splinter group challenges the leadership by defying its decrees? From what we know of Al Qaeda’s core leadership we can assume that they simply do not have the manpower and weapons to suppress of overrule the breakaway group. Another possible implication of the loose structure of the Al Qaeda Network is that they may no longer be able to plan and execute complex coordinated spectacular attacks on the lines of 9/11, through some experts dispute this. Aims, Capabilities and Plans 4. The main aims of the Al Qaeda movement are: — to eject the US and its allies from the Middle East and all Muslim lands; — to overthrow existing Muslim governments/regimes, on the grounds that they are “Apostate” regimes which betray the cause of the true Islam, as defined by bin Laden and Zawahiri; and 3240461001 Page Type [E] 27-06-06 00:33:14 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Ev 2 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence — ultimately to establish a pan-Islamist Caliphate to bring all Muslims under the rule of an Islamist super-state. 5. Al Qaeda believes that the use of the weapon of mass casualty terrorism and the belief that Allah is “on their side” will ensure that they win ultimate victory. The aim of killing as many of their “enemy” including civilians, wherever and whenever the opportunity arises was spelt out in bin Laden’s notorious Fatwa of February 1998. It is Al Qaeda’s explicit commitment to mass-killing, so horrifically demonstrated in its 9/11 attacks, that make it by far the most dangerous terrorist network in the modern world. 6. What do we know of Al Qaeda’s capabilities? The key resource for any terrorist organisation is its membership and their level of commitment, training, expertise and experience. In attack after attack Al Qaeda’s network of networks has proved its ability to deploy large numbers of operatives and to recruit more than suYcient new members to replace those lost by capture and death in suicide bombing or in armed confrontations with security forces. We should remember that it only takes relatively small numbers to carry out attacks which can kill thousands and inflict severe economic damage and disruption. The 9/11 attacks were carried out by 19 suicide hijackers and a support network of a handful of people. There is no evidence that the movement is unable to obtain the funds and explosives it needs to carry out major coordinated masskilling suicide bombing attacks. There is overwhelming evidence from a whole series of police investigations into Al Qaeda movement activities that the local networks are not only carrying out the planning and execution of operations: they are in most cases raising the cash to fund such operations and obtaining the explosives and other materials and vehicles or other equipment through thefts, corruption and organised crime in their own areas. However, although small scale terrorist bombing is a very low cost activity for the local networks the cost of mounting a coordinated mass-casualty attack may well be beyond the resources of a local network, and hence shortage of funds may act as a significant barrier to mounting more spectacular attacks. It has been estimated that the 9/11 attacks cost Al Qaeda around $500,000. At that time this was well within the financial capabilities of Al Qaeda’s core leadership. It is unlikely that they would find it so easy to fund such a massively lethal and destructive series of attacks today. The freezing of Al Qaeda assets in the banking system has not been extensive enough though to deprive the Al Qaeda of all its resources but it has compelled the terrorist leadership to rely more than ever on local networks for the resources to carry out local attacks. 7. By far the more important capability for carrying out local attacks is the availability of expertise, especially in bomb making, operational planning and tactics. The Al Qaeda network’s supply of well-trained and experienced terrorist operatives has been enormously increased as a result of the field experience provided in the Iraq conflict. Foreign terrorists who have been involved with the Al Qaeda Jihad in Mesopotamia led by the Jordanian Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, are now able to return to their countries of origin, including the EU member states, battle hardened and with skills acquired and honed in Iraq. It is also noteworthy that in recent weeks we have seen tactics methods copied from the terrorist campaign in Iraq being used in Afghanistan by Taleban and Al Qaeda-linked groups and their Afghan warlord allies to attack. For example the terrorists have rammed a vehicle carrying British personnel with a vehicle packed with explosives. In another close parallel with Iraq the terrorists have also started to mount attacks on recruits to the newly-established Afghan Army. 8. It is possible to obtain a clear idea of the Al Qaeda leadership’s long-term strategy from their writings. Zawahiri’s Knights Under the Prophet’s Banner, for example, stresses the importance they attach to the dual strategy of seeking to establish control over a base area within the heart of the Muslim world while at the same time carrying the struggle to the homelands of the US and its allies. The US military has just announced that they have recently intercepted a letter from Zawahiri to Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, Head of Al Qaeda in Iraq. Zawahiri is confident that Al Qaeda will gain a victory in Iraq, and sees this as the first step, the setting up of a Caliphate initially in Iraq, but followed by waging Jihad in Syria, Lebanon, Egypt, finally leading on to the destruction of Israel. The US Department of Defence is convinced that his document is genuine, and, if so, it provides an interesting glimpse of Al Qaeda’s strategic plans. The letter also reveals evidence of divisions within the global Al Qaeda network. Zawahiri warns that Zarqawi’s particularly cruel measures such as the mass killing of Shia Muslims and the beheading of hostages may alienate public opinion in the Muslim world. If this letter is genuine, as the American government believes, it confirms that the core leadership is unable to control all activities carried out in the name of Al Qaeda. It also confirms the point made earlier re schisms: such a major split on questions of tactics suggests the possible development of deeper and more lasting splits in the movement. 9. As for plans for specific operations, alas we do not have adequate human intelligence on the precise intentions of the operational planners, cell leaders and support networks. However, we can learn from the investigations carried out by police and judicial bodies into previous attacks successful and failed, in order to learn more about their modus operandi. We know enough from the case history to understand the care and sophistication Al Qaeda network groups use to plan attacks. A vivid example was the information found on an Al Qaeda laptop computer captured in Pakistan which showed that the operations planners were closely examining not only the details of the security provided for key financial targets they planned to attack in the US, but also the precise structure of the buildings in order to decide on the type and strength of explosives to use. It is typical of the Al Qaeda network to engage in detailed reconnaissance and intelligence gathering in preparation for any major operation. 3240461001 Page Type [O] 27-06-06 00:33:14 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Ev 3 How the Iraq Factor has been Exploited by the Al Qaeda Movement 10. One of the most significant developments in the evolution of Al Qaeda since 2003 has been the way the movement has exploited the allied invasion and occupation of Iraq. Whatever view one may take on the decision to invade Iraq it is simply ignoring reality to deny that the invasion and occupation have been a big boost for Al Qaeda and a setback for the coalition against terrorism. The invasion was a propaganda gift to Al Qaeda because they could portray it as an unprovoked imperialistic attack on a Muslim land. Al Qaeda poses as the defender of Muslim lands and people everywhere. They used this as a recruiting sergeant and as an opportunity for fund raising for their global jihad. Moreover the conflict provided a rich concentration of US and other western military and civilian targets in a country which the militants could enter all too easily across virtually uncontrolled borders. As this fragile experiment in establishing a democratic government moved forward in Iraq, Al Qaeda has a growing incentive to attack because the last thing they wish to see in Iraq, or anywhere else in the Muslim world, is the successful establishment of a democratic political system. Having failed to prevent the free elections in January 2005 they are now desperate to disrupt the eVorts to secure and agreed democratic constitution for Iraq and to provoke an all out civil war between the Sunnis and the Shiite majority. This is what the brutal Al Qaeda bomb attacks on Shiite civilians and clerics are designed to achieve. 11. It is absurd to suggest that recognising the way Al Qaeda has exploited the war in Iraq to its own considerable advantage in some way “excuses” Al Qaeda’s terrorism. In my view there can never be an excuse for the use of terrorism, whoever the perpetrators. Terrorism involves the deliberate mass murder and injury of civilians and is a crime against international law and humanity. However, understanding more about the motivation of terrorists and how they are attracted into extremist groups and groomed to be suicide bombers, is a vital subject for research. “Know thine enemy” has always been a key maxim of successful strategists. How are we to unravel the Al Qaeda if we do not understand what makes them tick? Nor should we overlook unforeseen consequences of foreign policy decision-making, especially when the key decision are taken by a more powerful ally which may also have failed to anticipate and plan for the implications of their policy for the struggle against international terrorism. International Efforts to Combat Al Qaeda Terrorism 12. In spite of the setbacks in the struggle against Al Qaeda described above there have been some very positive developments in the international response which need to be taken into account if we are to get a more balanced assessment: — In spite of deep divisions among members of the Coalition Against Terrorism over the invasion of Iraq international intelligence cooperation in counter-terrorism especially at the bilateral level, has continued to improve. For example, Spain, France and Germany have continued to cooperation closely with the United States in sharing intelligence on the Al Qaeda network despite their opposition to Washington’s policy in Iraq. — EU member states (especially Spain, Germany, France and the UK) have shown considerable success in using their criminal justice systems to try persons suspected of involvement in Al Qaeda linked terrorism. The US government’s apparent determination to circumvent their own highlyrespected Federal Criminal Court system and to resort to detention without trial for terrorist suspects is baZing and deeply damaging to America’s reputation as a champion of democracy and the rule of law. — One of the most encouraging developments in international response has been the un-dramatic but vital work of capacity building in the developing countries, for example the assistance programme of the FCO in disseminating expertise in anti-terrorism law, policing and intelligence work and the work of the international agencies such as ICAO, IATA and ACI in enhancing aviation security and of IMO in maritime security. — The valuable progress in counter-terrorism made by the EU following the Madrid and London bombings for example through the Europe Arrest Warrant mechanism, and the enhanced intelligence sharing and judicial cooperation procedures through EUROPOL, SITCEN, and EUROJUST. This cooperation provides a useful model for other regional IGOs and it is particularly encouraging that the UK has take a very useful role during the British Presidency to further enhance the EU cooperation in this key field. Major Weaknesses in the International Response to Terrorism 13. If asked to pinpoint major weaknesses in the international response to terrorism I would stress four massive problems: — In view of Al Qaeda’s serious eVorts to acquire CBRN weapons much more intensive eVorts are required to tighten and police the international arms control and counter-proliferation regimes to enable them to encompass prevention of proliferation to non-state groups. Far more than changes 3240461002 Page Type [E] 27-06-06 00:33:14 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Ev 4 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence in international treaties is required. We urgently need powerful international agencies to police such regimes. The IAEA is an encouraging, though far from perfect model. We need to build similar mechanisms to deal with chemical and biological weapons. — Many governments still show a lack of political will and courage to take an unambiguous stand against terrorism whoever the perpetrators and whatever their self-professed cause. There are no good terrorists. Terrorism is a brutal attack on the most basic human right of all , the right to life. It should be outlawed and suppressed wherever it occurs. Until this happens we will continue to see more atrocities like the 9/11 attacks, the Beslan school massacre, the Bali bombings, the Madrid and London bombings and hundreds of other acts of mass murder. — There has been a tragic failure to wage the battle of ideas against the extremists who preach hatred and incite people to commit terrorism. All democratic governments, including our own have a special responsibility to actively promote democratic values, the role of law and human rights. Moreover this cannot simply be accomplished by radio and TV programmes and political speeches. Action counts far more than words in the diYcult world of upholding democratic values and human rights. If the behaviour of democratic states flatly contradicts our stated values we lose our credibility in the battle of ideas worldwide. — Closely interwoven with the battle of ideas against the promoters and preachers of terrorism is the struggle to uphold basic human rights. While it is true that some extreme human rights campaigners elevate human rights into a totally impractical and irresponsible rejection of all collective moral and political obligations that make the enjoyment of human rights possible, most citizens of democracies and many who are working to democratise their countries would be shocked if we were told that some of our most cherished civil liberties (eg habeas corpus, the right to a fair trial, freedom of speech, freedom of religion, freedom of movement, freedom of assembly, freedom of expression), were to be suspended in the name of state security. If we throw away our basic liberties in the name of dealing with the terrorism threat we will have done the terrorists’ work for them. Conclusion 14. As Joseph S Nye, Yukio Satoh and I recommended in our Trilateral Commission report Addressing the New International Terrorism (May 2003): “Dialogues about the protection of civil liberties in the face of security threats should be a regular feature of the meetings of the home security oYcials and should be reinforced by meetings of judicial oYcials and parliamentarians. Assistance programmes must include attention of human right issues. Not only are such values central to the definition of the civilisation that we seek to protect, but overreactions to insecurity that infringe civil liberties undercut the sort of attractive power that is essential to maintain the support of moderate opinion and to deprive terrorists from recruiting new converts”. 15. I can assure the Committee that it is my firm belief that we can succeed in unravelling the Al Qaeda network without undermining our civil liberties in the process. October 2005 Witnesses: Professor Paul Wilkinson, Professor of International Relations and Chair of the Centre for the Study of Terrorism and Political Violence, University of St Andrews, and Mr Peter Taylor, BBC (Panorama), examined. Q1 Chairman: Good afternoon, gentlemen. Welcome to the Foreign AVairs Committee. We are very pleased that you have found time to come before us. As you are aware, we are discussing a very important topic on which you are both experts. I will get straight into the evidence session. I welcome you, Mr Taylor and Professor Wilkinson, to the Committee. We have seen recent attacks here in London and elsewhere in the world. Do they indicate anything new about international terrorism? Is there a change in recent months compared to what we were dealing with in the period around 9/11 and just afterwards? Mr Taylor: Are you happy if I go first, Paul, and we can agree or disagree or whatever. I think there is a fundamental change in the nature of al Qaeda and its associated, but not necessarily directly related, groupings. That is the result of the successes that the coalition had in removing the jihadi training camps in Afghanistan. Al Qaeda was denied a base in Afghanistan, it tried to set up bases in places like Fallujah, in Iraq. They were destroyed again by the coalition forces. My understanding is that in the course of interrogation of senior or middle ranking al Qaeda people they said they were under orders to return to their countries of origin to recruit and train for Jihad on home ground, recruiting home-grown would-be jihadis, and I think what the recent attacks show is the operation of those semi-autonomous cells that do not necessarily have any directly linear connection with al Qaeda. The 9/11 attacks were the result of al Qaeda planning. Al Qaeda was the command and control centre. It no longer works like that, so these cells are their protean: they change; 3240461002 Page Type [O] 27-06-06 00:33:14 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Ev 5 19 October 2005 Professor Paul Wilkinson and Mr Peter Taylor they are autonomous, or semi-autonomous. What binds them together is a common association with the philosophy of bin Laden and al Qaeda. This makes them all the more diYcult to identify and penetrate for the various intelligence agencies. I think an indication of that is the attacks on Madrid. The Madrid cell got under the wire, although there were indirect al Qaeda connections with Madrid via Abu Dada, who has just got 27 years in Spain. The attacks in Casablanca got under the wire, the recent attack in Bali the other weekend got under the wire, critically the London bombers, the 7/7 bombers from Leeds got under the wire. There was absolutely zero intelligence on the Leeds cell, nothing at all, and that is a problem. If the intelligence services, the security services, are dealing with al Qaeda as such— a bit like dealing with the IRA that I studied for over 30 odd years—there is a structure, there is a precise goal and, once you know what the structure is, you can begin to penetrate and take out the various cells, al Qaeda and its associated groupings, and there is a danger of putting the al Qaeda stamp on everything that happens—sometimes it is justified, sometimes it is not—nevertheless, the threat that these new kind of cells that subscribe to the same philosophy as al Qaeda and bin Laden are extremely dangerous and I think the evidence speaks for itself. Professor Wilkinson: I agree with what Peter Taylor has said. I would like to add that I think the fact that this is a network of networks makes al Qaeda a movement rather than a traditional type of terrorist organisation, but we should not under-estimate its significance just because it is diVerent. In fact, as Peter has made clear, it does make it far more diYcult for the intelligence services and the whole intelligence community of the coalition against terrorism to track down cells and to identify new networks as they are created, but it is even more complex than that. What we have in this movement is an ideology which appears to be capable of travelling around the entire Muslim world, not just in the countries which are populated by the majority of Muslim people, but among the Muslim diasporas, and it is not really the case that the London attacks were the first instance of this, but what we are seeing is this trend towards recruiting local networks which are, of course, in contact with others in the global network but do not need to go to training camps. They are inducted from the Internet, from the propaganda that is available, from people they meet in the campuses, in prison in some cases, in mosques in some cases, though we must me be careful of assuming that the traditional mosque is the place where all the recruitment is done. In fact, much of it is done outside the framework of the traditional mosque because the young people who are angry, alienated, likely candidates for recruitment are in many cases alienated from the mosque community and the traditional religious leaders; so these are people who are got at in diVerent ways; but the very fact that these networks are being created, in some cases in the heart of our cities in western countries, makes an enormously complex problem, and it is a problem, of course, in terms of community relations of trying to establish better relations with the moderate elements in the community who themselves feel threatened by this extremism within their own ranks, and I think the numbers are often quite small, but what we need to remember is you only need small numbers: the 19 hijackers in the 9/11 attacks did terrible damage and took nearly 3,000 lives. Very small numbers can be involved in deadly attacks, and therefore we have every reason, I think, to regard al Qaeda as a serious problem. It is the most serious terrorist threat that we have at the present time and a more dangerous network internationally than we have seen in the previous history of terrorism. Mr Taylor: Can I add one point on recruiting, because the process of recruiting young Muslims as jihadis is absolutely critical and there is a distinct pattern that I have studied in America in BuValo Lackawanna, in Morocco, in Madrid, in Pakistan and here, and the process that Paul has outlined is absolutely right that potential recruits are identified at radical mosques but the actual indoctrination— the showing of videos, of Palestine, of Chechnya, of Kashmir and increasingly of Iraq—is done privately in apartments, flats, etc, afterwards. The other really interesting factor, and this applies to the Leeds bombers and certainly applied to the Casablanca suicide bombers, because I talked to the mother of one of those, is that by and large the families know absolutely nothing about it. It comes as a deep shock. You will recall that some of the families of the London bombers got in touch with the police, saying, “Have you seen my son?” Answer: “He is dead,” and it transpires that he blew himself up and killed lots of other people. So we must not assume that families are involved in this. There is a terrible danger, you are well aware, of stereotyping families and stereotyping the community. That is really dangerous because that is counter-productive. Q2 Chairman: Can I probe you a little bit more? You referred, Professor Wilkinson, to the Muslim diaspora. Is this a Sunni Muslim diaspora you are referring to or is it a Muslim diaspora in general? Clearly in Iraq we have seen statements made against Shias by people purporting to be part of the al Qaeda network. I would be interested if you could clarify whether we are dealing with Islam in its totality or particular types of Islam. Professor Wilkinson: The network is mainly established within the Sunni community. There are some sympathisers and supporters in the Shia community, but they are in a relatively small proportion, and, of course, the violence perpetrated against Shi’ites in Iraq has made the Shi’ite community very hostile and resentful of the violence that is being meted by al Qaeda in Mesopotamia, because that is the umbrella name they give themselves under Zarqawi. It is interesting that in the recent communication that was published, the translated version, in the Guardian the other day, of Zawahiri’s letter to Zarqawi, you will find that Zawahiri is warning that that could be politically unwise because it would threaten public support. I think the fact is that the majority of their support has always come from the Sunni community, but in Iraq, 3240461002 Page Type [E] 27-06-06 00:33:14 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Ev 6 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence 19 October 2005 Professor Paul Wilkinson and Mr Peter Taylor because the Shi’ites are in the majority and because al Qaeda’s leaders undoubtedly hope that they will be able to establish a kind of base in Iraq to replace the base they lost in Afghanistan, the tensions they have created between Shi’ite and Sunni that they may feel are going to work in their favour may be a sign of the weakness of this networking system. I do not think all the networking arrangements necessarily favour the al Qaeda movement, because when you have a movement which is constituted of a network of networks worldwide there are bound to be some that begin to diVer from the core leadership in its strategy and tactics, and we are beginning to see that. We see it in the communication that was intercepted between Zawahiri and Zarqawi, but it has already been noted in Jemaah Islamiyah in South East Asia, which is an aYliate of al Qaeda heavily penetrated by al Qaeda in the late nineties, responsible for the Bali bombing of October 2002, and Jemaah Islamiyah has got a faction within it which is vociferously criticising attacks which put fellow Muslims in Indonesia at risk. That is an interesting development. None of the core leadership statements in the past have expressed any remorse or regret about these killings of large numbers of civilians in Muslim countries. Now there is perhaps a dawning of a realisation that that is a counter-productive tactic, and I think it is an interesting sign that they may run into real problems with other elements in the network; so keeping the network together, even though you have an ideology which is quite simple and clear, is actually not as easy as it looks and they may have over-reached themselves by imagining that they can keep this whole enterprise together. Mr Taylor: I commend to you the letter that Paul refers to that was translated in the Guardian. It is really significant: because there is a danger of dismissing the al Qaeda movement, as Paul quite rightly refers to it, as being a terrorist gang in the same way as we used to dismiss the IRA way back in the seventies. They are politically sophisticated to a degree that many of us do not realise, and that letter from Zawahiri to Musab al-Zarqawi is really worth looking at. He also warns in that letter—it is sort of friendly advice, it is not a heavy number from bin Laden’s number two to Mr al Qaeda in Iraq— basically, “Cut out the beheadings because it is not winning you any friends amongst the people whose support you need. You need the water in which to swim.” There is an interesting parallel back with Northern Ireland in 1987 after the Enniskillen bombs when Gerry Adams rarely and publicly criticised the IRA and said, “You must not attack these kinds of targets. It is counter-productive.” Martin McGuinness did the same after Paddy Gillespie was tied to his truck, his family held hostage, told to drive to another check-point and then they detonated the bomb. He was a human bomb, and that turned oV a lot of would-be supporters for the IRA. McGuinness spoke out. It did not happen again. So I think that letter from Zawahiri to Zarqawi is really interesting and significant and gives us a diVerent insight into the way that they are thinking and operating. Q3 Mr Maples: I would like to ask Paul Wilkinson, but please come in, Mr Taylor, if you want to, about what is happening in southern Iraq, particularly in Basra. I think we were telling ourselves that we were doing rather well down there—we were doing rather better than the Americans and things were quite peaceful—but recently, in the last few months, it seems to have got very ugly indeed. I wonder why you think it is. Is this a vying for supremacy between Shi’ite groups? It seemed that everything was about to fall into their lap—we were practically ready to deliver the whole place to them—so why has there been this upsurge of violence against British interests and British troops, and, secondly, what role do you think Iran is playing, because again one would have thought, if you were the Iranian government, what you would want is a stable but weak Iraq on your borders? Why are they trying to stir up trouble now in the southern bit when it seemed likely that it was going to fall into their lap anyway? I wonder if you can tell me what you think is going on there? Professor Wilkinson: My understanding is that the politics of the Shi’ite community is quite complex and that really there are some quite influential figures in the religious leadership who really do want to keep on good terms with the British because they believe that that has been advantageous. They believe the new constitution, if it is accepted in the referendum, will actually be favourable for them, but there are more radical Shi’ites, as you know, who were opposed to the whole project of a period of transition to a kind of democratic project masterminded by the new government of Iraq with the Americans very much in the front seat. I think that radical element have been much influenced by the radical element in Iran, because of course the Iranian political system has shifted rather with the election of the new hard line leader, and I think those hardliners are taking advantage of a natural coalition with the hardliners in southern Iraq. After all, it contains the holy places which they almost revere as the Sunnis revere Mecca and Medina. They see these as people who are their people, and they want to work with them to create a revolutionary Islamist extension, if you like, of the Iranian revolution in Iraq. They have been in the minority, and I think they are still in the minority in southern Iraq, but it does create a greater problem for the British forces, who I think have been doing brilliant job of handling this diYcult situation. But the very fact that the Iranians know that area so well, and have their contacts with the pro Iranian hard-line elements in the militia means that they are able to work to our disadvantage behind the scenes. I think that was behind that confrontation, you remember, at the police station where the two soldiers were being held and they were brought out by the British Army. I think that the people who were behind that were in league with the hardliners on the other side of the border in Iran. Q4 Mr Maples: So it is almost a struggle for control between diVerent Shi’ite groups. Is there evidence that Sistanians or the mainstream, if I can call them 3240461002 Page Type [O] 27-06-06 00:33:14 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Ev 7 19 October 2005 Professor Paul Wilkinson and Mr Peter Taylor mainstream, disapprove of what is being done and what Iran is fermenting down there or are they passively taking some of the benefit from it? Professor Wilkinson: I think there is some evidence that they disapprove. They would like to see a stabilisation of Iraq which they think they can achieve with the constitution giving them a real dominant position which, as the majority, they believe they are entitled to, and they want that system to work. They have spent quite a lot of time and eVort negotiating it and they regard the concession that the American government made about agreeing to the constitution talking about Islam being the basis of the society as a positive victory for them, but, on that basis, the moderate Shi’ite leaders are quite happy to continue with a constitution which has been hammered out with such diYculty. Of course, one of the problems is that if the Sunni community rejects it either in the referendum or through the men of violence simply creating so much violence that you cannot operate the constitution, the hard-line faction, supported by the Iranian revolutionary guards and the new Iran leadership, will undoubtedly try to push matters further. I think what the British Army rightly feel is that the situation is getting more diYcult to calculate, more dangerous, because this conflict is becoming much more open. It has been at covert level so far. Q5 Mr Keetch: I want to turn to the home-grown Jihad, as you put it. I have seen what you did on the IRA structure. It was a military structure in a sense: you had quartermasters, logisticians, reconnaissance groups; you had the kind of thing you would get in any kind of army structure. I want to understand the structure of the cell that attacked us on 7 July. Was the person that radicalised those people, in your judgment, one of the people who blew himself up, or is there somebody beyond the four that did the radicalising? Equally, in terms of the people that then supplied the weapons, supplied the bomb-making expertise and equipment, is there somebody else as well, or was this a group that literally created itself, went into battle, that no longer exists? Mr Taylor: It certainly was not a group that created itself. It was self-contained. It did what it did entirely of its own volition and motivation. The answer to the question we are unable to give at the moment. Perhaps Eliza Manningham-Buller or Peter Clarke or somebody might be able to provide a better answer. I doubt it at this stage. My understanding is that the hunt, the search, for others who were involved—and unquestionably there were others involved: cells do not just operate like that, those are the front-line “soldiers” who are prepared to conduct what they call the suicide mission, the martyrdom mission. It is likely, I think, that there will be further arrests in the fullness of time, be they sooner or later, but the hunt is on for the other people. It is thought that there may well have been, I hate to use this awful word, mastermind but certainly a figure, who coordinated, directed them to do what they did. This is all pure supposition on my part. This is precisely what the intelligence service are trying to establish at the moment, and, unlike the 21/7 bombers, who are in custody and may or may not be talking, none of 7/7 bombers can talk because they are dead, but the person who recruited them and radicalised them may have been an entirely separate person. That person may have come in from outside, may be indigenous, we simply do not know. These are the critical questions that the security and intelligence services are addressing. Q6 Mr Keetch: I am not in any way asking you to give away information that would aVect that specific case. I am just asking your opinion as an expert. Would you believe that the people who did the radicalising, was that done solely in the UK or was that done in maybe visits to Pakistan or elsewhere or would it have been a mixture of the two? Mr Taylor: I suspect it was a mixture of the two. When I did the Pakistan film in my last series “The New al Qaeda” I did two interviews with President Musharraf and two interviews with the ISI head of the Counter-Terrorism Centre, and I had to go back to Pakistan to address the questions in the light of what had happened here. Both President Musharraf—because he is informed by his intelligence services anyway—and the ISI have not the slightest doubt that there is or was a mastermind figure behind it. They for not surprising reasons wish to downplay any possible Pakistani connection. As President Musharraf said to me, “It is your problem. Those are British born Pakistanis. It is nothing to do with us. They are your problem.” I think that is an over simplification. Two of them certainly did visit Pakistan. They were there for a period up to three months. As yet I am told it is not known, although I find it diYcult to believe precisely what they got up to, whom they met, what they did, but I think the radicalisation and the training may have happened in a Pakistani camp (although the President assured me there are no such things now in Pakistan) or it may have occurred across the border in Afghanistan, but I think it is probably a combination of external influences and domestic firming up, if you like. Q7 Mr Mackay: May I come back to Iraq for a moment. I will ask you both of you. At some point allied troops will leave Iraq. The only question is when. I wonder what impact now and in the foreseeable future that would have on terrorist activity in Iraq. I suppose behind the question is: are we becoming more of a problem than the solution of resolving terrorism in that area? Professor Wilkinson: I think that is really one of the most diYcult things for us to speculate about, because of the unknown factors. It is certainly very important to understand how determined al Qaeda is to try and take advantage of the situation in Iraq. They are desperate to capitalise on it, to establish some kind of base, if not the whole territory certainly a chunk of territory created in some anarchic conflict situation, and they would use that as a platform for expanding their activities in the Middle East generally; but I think that as far as the Iraqis are 3240461002 Page Type [E] 27-06-06 00:33:14 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Ev 8 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence 19 October 2005 Professor Paul Wilkinson and Mr Peter Taylor concerned, they are showing considerable courage in standing for the democratic idea which many people assumed they would not really be willing to go for, particularly with all the threats made against them, and I think that is one of the most encouraging and heartening aspects of the situation. The turnout for the constitutional referendum was remarkable, and so regardless whether one is for or against the original invasion, one can see some possible really good developments coming out of this, but so much depends on how successful the fragile Iraqi government is in pulling the people together, especially the diVerent elements of the multi-ethnic new arrangements in Iraq, and how eVective the new Iraqi army and police can be at gradually taking over a larger part of the burden that the coalition troops have been carrying. I think a too hasty exit would be a disaster, because there is clearly no will among the international community, the UN Security Council members, the European Union allies, to take on the burden that is being carried by the coalition troops at present. If we were to just say that in a certain period of time—let us say by summer next year—we will definitely be withdrawing, that would simply be a tremendous invitation, a spur, to the terrorists to keep on hammering away under the clear belief that they would be able to take advantage of that situation and they would want to build up to a position where they could grab as much territory as possible and undermine their opponents. I think we have to be very careful to concert our action with the new Iraqi authorities, to do our very best to invest in the training and preparedness of the Iraqi security forces which were, sadly, of course, completely dismantled with the ending of the initial hostilities, and I think if we could persuade some countries to join us to replace those who have pulled out from Iraq so that we can share the burden more eVectively, and particularly if we could persuade the Security Council, now that the situation has changed so much in Iraq, to give its blessing to a peace-keeping operation to assist the new democratic government in Iraq, that would, I think, be a way of making the transition a great deal easier, adding a great deal of legitimacy to the security operation. I know that that seems rather distant at the moment, but I think we have to press for that and keep on reminding the Security Council that this is a problem that aVects all of us, because it aVects the stability of the entire Middle East. It would have very serious implications for the entire international community if al Qaeda managed, for the first time since the toppling of the Taleban regime, to acquire a territory in which they could again have training camps, conduct research into weapons of greater destructive power, and so on. I think we should be able to get the argument across, but, whatever people felt about the dispute over the invasion, we are now in a diVerent situation, a much more dangerous situation really for the international community, in which we need international support and help to a larger extent than we have had it far; and that would enable us to gradually withdraw our troops, who have done, I think, professionally a brilliant job under the most diYcult and testing circumstances with, in many cases, great disadvantages in not having the equipment they should have had and the resources they should have had in the right places at the right time when they were expected to take on this task. Q8 Mr Purchase: Those of us with any interest in political history will be dismayed to learn that part of the movement, as you now term it, is intent on moderating at least its public face in order to keep its recruits and maybe to get even more, and it is always more diYcult to deal with people who appear to be reasonable than those who are not, but I do not think we should be in any way persuaded that any one faction is any less murderous than the other, and one way—a dishonourable, a disreputable way—of dealing with political schisms is by exploiting it by enterism. No doubt we are fully tooled up for that, but what prospects are there in the face of the ideology that we are seeing with al Qaeda for a successful exploitation of any schism that might be present? Professor Wilkinson: I think you are right that the core of the movement is not in any kind of way moving towards the idea of compromise, moderation, etcetera—that is totally uncharacteristic of all their propaganda. Even in the case of this warning, as Peter rightly described it, from Zawahiri to Zarqawi, it is not done in terms of moral critique or of a kind humanitarian concern for his fellow Muslims. I think we must not underestimate the sheer ruthlessness and brutality of this movement. It is still acting on the decree, the fatwa that was issued by bin Laden in February 1988 in which all Muslims were urged to kill Americans and their allies, including civilians, whenever and wherever possible. That is a very unusual position for a terrorist movement to take. In fact, internationally there has never been a network of the scale we have with a presence in over 60 counties that has taken that very extreme position. A colleague of mine who was a pioneer of terrorism studies in America, Brian Jenkins, described terrorists in the seventies as people who wanted a lot of people watching, not a lot of people dead. In the case of al Qaeda, you have really a movement that clearly still wants a lot of people watching but it also wants a lot of people dead. We should, I think, bear in mind that in all these attacks that have occurred since I last gave evidence before this committee in 2003 large numbers of casualties have been caused because they deliberately went out of their way to kill people on a large scale through these attacks. Fortunately they have not succeeded in doing anything as ambitious or as deadly as the 9/11 attacks, although they certainly have plotted to undertake more deadly attacks. In some cases those conspiracies have been thwarted. In some cases we believe the plans may still exist, they just have not been implemented, and it is a worry that they may still try to implement them. So I share your view that we must not under estimate the potential lethality of al Qaeda and its potential ruthlessness, but what I would stress is that where one sees a schism, where you see people with some political criticisms of a leadership, that is a 3240461002 Page Type [O] 27-06-06 00:33:14 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Ev 9 19 October 2005 Professor Paul Wilkinson and Mr Peter Taylor hopeful sign because the history of terrorism shows that when they start to quarrel with each other that is the beginning of their decline. In the case of the Red Brigades, as I am sure Peter will remember because Peter did some work on the Red Brigades as well, when the police went to the safe-houses they would find stacks of communiqués and manifestos and rival manifestos, because they disagreed with the leadership’s view; and that was the beginning of the end for the Red Brigades, because it revealed so much about their internal diVerences it could be exploited by the judicial system. Q9 Mr Purchase: I think we have been there? Professor Wilkinson: Yes. I think it is something we should certainly be encouraged by and, wherever possible, exploit the divisions which take place, but it does not mean that we can assume that the whole movement has somehow shifted its centre of gravity to become a more pragmatic corrigible movement, as it were. I would still view it as a particularly incorrigible movement because of its dedication to mass killing, because of the absolutism of its aims and because it is not just aiming to change the political situation in a particular territory, such as the Palestinian/Israeli conflict, or the Kashmir conflict, or Chechnya, it is trying to remodel the entire global system. To us it seems hopelessly grandiose; to them it is a cause which is going to succeed because they believe Allah is on their side and because they believe that terrorism is a marvellous weapon of asymmetrical warfare and they believe that they have carried it to the heights of sophistication and that they can use it as the major method of undermining the will of the western democracies and of the Muslim states. You will remember they want to topple all those as well because the regimes are seen as apostate regimes which are betraying the true system that they believe in, which they believe is true Islam. Q10 Mr Purchase: Can I remind you of Lenin and Trotsky. Mr Taylor: Yes. They see Iraq as the first domino, and the others dominos, according to their strategy, then begin to fall. Saudi Arabia is high on the list, Egypt is high on the list, all those leaders that are regarded apostates are targeted and, finally, Israel is no more. Q11 Mr Purchase: But is there a prospect of any kind of infiltration, entryism, call it what you will, of that delivering in the short or medium term? Mr Taylor: When you say “entryism”, what do you mean by “entryism”? Q12 Mr Purchase: I mean trained people going into little cells. Mr Taylor: You mean infiltration? Q13 Mr Purchase: Yes. Mr Taylor: It is very, very diYcult. The answer is I do not know, but I would be surprised if the intelligence services had any significant penetration of the very cells in the networks. If they had, as Paul quite rightly says, several very serious attacks in this country have been thwarted because of good intelligence, but although penetrating the IRA and the loyalist paramilitaries was relatively straightforward, it is extraordinarily diYcult in dealing with these kinds of groupings, and that is one of the main problems that the intelligence services face. It is human intelligence in the end. It is having somebody in the cell or close to the cell that knows its personnel and its intentions that is going to provide you with the pinpoint intelligence to stop whatever they are planning. Q14 Sir John Stanley: Could I ask you both, I have seen it written that the single most powerful weapon that al Qaeda have in Iraq is the video camera, and I would like to ask you both, have you come across evidence of video footage being taken not on an ad hoc basis, on a chance basis, but being taken on a deliberate systematic basis to construct videos which on the one hand show, as they would describe it, “atrocities” being committed by coalition and Iraqi forces coupled with “successes”, as they would describe it, against coalition forces for the deliberate purpose of using these on the Internet and most particularly using them in video form as recruiting drums for suicide bombers? Is Iraq being used as a test-bed and an area where there is a systematic use by al Qaeda of the production of these sorts of videos with the express purpose of recruiting additional suicide bombers? Professor Wilkinson: I think my short answer to that, Sir John, would be, yes, but in Peter Taylor we have an expert commentator on these matters. Some of you will have seen his three documentaries on the New al Qaeda. Anyone who has not managed to get hold of it, please have a word with Peter because it is a superb series, the best guide to the new al Qaeda that has been presented on television, I think. He shows how they use this very systematic method of collecting images, and I ought to let Peter describe it. Mr Taylor: We devoted a whole programme called “Jihad.com”, and Ann has a copy of three DVDs of the three programmes. The first one, “Jihad.com” looked at the very issue that Sir John has questioned us about. I think it is an issue of supreme importance, because they are technically advanced, they use, they manipulate the situation in Iraq, and I am very worried about Iraq. I see it as a potential Vietnam. They use the situation there to recruit, to propagandise, to fund raise, to train and also to plan and operate, and it is the images that they film in Iraq, and it is very straightforward. They go into a shop or have one imported for them, just a basic video camera, they plan a suicide operation, and the classic case in point is the awful case of the killing of the three Black Watch soldiers which I questioned Dr Mohammed al-Masari about and had him talk me through the video and said, “How can you seriously allow this to be on your website?” and asked all those obvious questions, but that is a classic case. They video the suicide bomber putting his belt on, they video and record him in the truck load of explosives going towards the target, which is the Black Watch vehicle, they record him saying 3240461002 Page Type [E] 27-06-06 00:33:14 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Ev 10 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence 19 October 2005 Professor Paul Wilkinson and Mr Peter Taylor “Allah U Akhbar, Allah U Akhbar, Allah U Akhbar”, and then they record the explosion and the deaths of the soldiers. They recorded, but, of course, we did not show, the remains of the soldiers being kicked in the dirt. All this is then simply slotted into a USB port of a laptop and it is zoomed up into the ether, downloaded at point A which is ready for it and then it is disseminated round the world, just like that—it is as simple as that—and you cannot stop it. That, I think, more than anything is one of the most powerful recruiting tools that they have, and my information is that in the analysis of the laptops of the Leeds bombers, the 7/7 bombers, the laptops they used, the computers that they used outside of their homes, the hard drives reveal exactly the kind of things—Iraq beheadings, jihadi propaganda— that we delineated in the programme. It is hugely important. The question is: how can you stop it? It is very, very diYcult. It is also a useful intelligence base for the intelligence services, but I think the disadvantages hugely outweigh the advantages. It is really diYcult, but really important. Iraq is the single most important recruiting tool that they have, there is no question about it, and when the Prime Minister made that remark about “It has got nothing to do with Iraq; they will think of any excuse”, I was surprised because the Prime Minister has a very fine record on countering “terrorism and political violence”, and I was surprised to hear him say that kind of remark about Iraq, which is patently not true, in my view anyway. Q15 Ms Stuart: I was interested in Professor Wilkinson’s observation in comparison with the seventies, because I have been toying with the idea that there may be similarities. I wondered to what extent. In a sense there was a similarity. The similarity was that they wanted to change the world, and I remember living through Black September and all that, but, given the importance of propaganda and given, as Peter tells us, in a sense we cannot do anything to stop their propaganda—and I think it was Professor Wilkinson who draws attention to the Voice of the Caliphate in your submission—are we missing something in trying to put our story, kind of counter propaganda? Are we suYciently switched on to draw an alternative picture through our means, whether it is major television, the BBC or an Arabic television station? Is it that kind of thing? In your view is there something we could do to be proactive? Professor Wilkinson: I believe we should be doing far more. I think we are failing on this particular score. The Americans are only spending, we discovered, 3% of their entire defence budget on public diplomacy on information. If you compare that with the Cold War years where information was so important—it ultimately helped us to end the Cold War—I think it is absolutely incompetent of us not to be doing more to use all the channels of communication that are open to us. We have the people with the language expertise, we have the media technology, but we are not making enough use of it, in my view, and I think that is a big failing: because as long as those ideas are unanswered, we are really creating new generations of suicide bombers while we are busy trying to unravel the existing networks and new ones are emerging. I think that the other point I would want to emphasise at this stage, because it goes hand in hand with the argument about the battle of ideas, is that observation of human rights protection in the policies of our country and all the countries in the coalition, including, of course, the United States, is not just a luxury. You do get comments sometimes from leaders within the coalition countries who imply that somehow this is something we can hardly aVord to worry about. I regard it as absolutely central: because if your deeds are not seen to be matching your rhetoric and your values, your claims to be upholding the rule of law and democratic processes and so on, then, of course, it is a wide open door for the propagandists at the other side to portray your society as led by hypocrites who do not really mean a word they say. I think it is really testimony to the fact that democracy of the kind we have developed in western democracies and the rule of law are attractive, that the Iraqi people, for example, so clearly hanker for having that system within their society, a peaceful secure society in which they have a constitution, in which they feel they have a stake, and the bravery of the Iraqi people coming out in the January elections, I think, was remarkable; so although I was a critic, and still am a critic, of the strategic decision to go into Iraq because I believe that it was bad for the campaign against al Qaeda, a major blunder, I can see there are some very positive things coming from this conflict which we could make better use of in the broader conflict with extremism from al Qaeda if only we had invested the eVort, and I think it is not too late. We should be doing far more of that. The money we spent on it would be chicken feed compared to the sort of money that is being spent on the deployment of our forces and the expensive technology that that requires. Mr Taylor: The BBC Arabic Service, which is in the planning, will not be a propaganda vehicle. That is not the BBC’s job. We are not in the business of propaganda. What it will do, I am sure, is present an alternative or a diVerent perspective on events to that propounded by an Al Jazeera, which has been phenomenally successful. You go into any Arab cafe in America or anywhere and they are not watching BBC World, they are watching Al Jazeera; so I think the advent of BBC World will go some way towards correcting the perceptions, but I stress, it will not be a propaganda vehicle, it will be a sort of corrective, if you like. I was talking to the World Service yesterday, their producers, and we were discussing this very issue. Unfortunately, the price of having a BBC Arabic service is the closure of several of its European services, which is a great pity. Q16 Richard Younger-Ross: The linkage with other terrorist groups is only evidence that, particularly in Iraq, al Qaeda are linking up with Hamas or Hezbollah or going into Chechnya. You also spoke, or at least Peter Taylor used the word “Vietnam”? 3240461002 Page Type [O] 27-06-06 00:33:14 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Ev 11 19 October 2005 Professor Paul Wilkinson and Mr Peter Taylor Mr Taylor: Potential Vietnam. Q17 Richard Younger-Ross: Do you have the opinion that the longer troops are there the harder it is going to be to win the war against terrorism and do you think there ought to be a clear extraction programme? Mr Taylor: I will answer the Vietnam question first. As I say, like everybody, I am enormously depressed by Iraq because the reason President Bush gave for going in there was as part of the war on terror post 9/11, and what we have done is fanned the flames of terrorism rather than subdue them, I think, by going into Iraq, but that is history now. I cannot see a withdrawal from Iraq because, as Paul has said, it is a bit like Northern Ireland again. I keep coming back to that, because although the problem of terrorism and political violence is diVerent—you are dealing with diVerent kinds of political violence, diVerent kinds of motivation—the principles of countering it remain the same, and in the same way (and I used to make films about it back in the seventies: “Bring the troops back home”), but we did not do that, we stayed the course in Northern Ireland and, as a result of staying the course there, we paid a high price. In the end the IRA came to the table for rather complicated reasons, rather simplistic reasons, and I think the prospect of a total withdrawal from Iraq and leaving it to the security forces that the coalition have trained, I cannot see that happening because I can just see it falling apart. If governments are prepared, our government is prepared, the American government is prepared, basically to cut and run, because that is what would happen if it is in the next one or two years, I think the thing is just going to fall apart and I just see a deeply depressing picture. As Paul says, I do not think— and again this is a personal view—having gone into Iraq, whatever the rights and wrongs of it, we are faced with the reality of it and my own view is, reluctantly, I think we, the British government, the British Army—and as Paul says, they have done a remarkable job in southern Iraq—have got to stay the course because otherwise the other guys are going to win. I am sorry to be so stark about it, but that is my grim analysis. Professor Wilkinson: I agree with that. On the question of links with other groups, I am assuming you mean groups outwith the network or networks, in other words groups like Hamas, Hezbollah, and so on. Interestingly enough, it is not so much a question of the al Qaeda movement trying to take them in as these movements anxious to keep their distance. Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad, for example, are well aware that if they were seen to be getting into bed with al Qaeda and being seen as part of that network, they would lose an enormous amount of potential leverage in terms of the road to peace, so it would be very unwise for them to do that. They have a totally diVerent agenda. They want an independent Palestinian state, of course the militants want to destruction of Israel as well, because they see that as an absolute ideological necessity, but they do not have that same global ambition to create participation with this Caliphate. That is much more al Qaeda’s thinking. Many of these traditional movements just have a very specific political agenda, usually tied to a particular territory, and there is no evidence that I have seen over the whole history of al Qaeda of them making any progress in winning over what I would call those traditional groups such as ETA, the IRA, and so on. They have totally diVerent types of agendas, modus operandi, and so on, but that does not mean that al Qaeda is limited in its potential for growth. What they have done is to concentrate on this massive networking operation in over 60 countries. Actually the American intelligence community believes it more, but as we do not have access in academia to classified information, we are going on the 60 figure which is one where we can prove from open sources where they have a presence. That still makes it the most widely dispersed international network ever. So although they are dealing with fellow extremists and radicals devoted to the idea of the aims of al Qaeda, they have still got enormous scope for recruiting many, many more people. They are not short of potential recruits, and that is why I take the view that it will take a long time for us to unravel this network globally, but I am perhaps paradoxically optimistic that we will ultimately be able to do it because I believe that al Qaeda has misjudged, as so many terrorist movements do, the eVect of terror on the public, on the population. The reaction of the Indonesian public to the Bali bombings, the reaction of the Moroccan public to the Casablanca bombings, of the Turkish public to the Istanbul bombings, again and again shows that they then want harder measures against the terrorists because they deeply resent being put in danger by these suicide attackers who will very probably kill many of their fellow citizens. Terrorism is a faulty weapon that often misfires. The terrorists do not seem to remember this, particularly al Qaeda. They are so devoted to the idea that terror is going to be the weapon that undermines the will of the West that I think they over estimate its capabilities, but that does not mean we have easy job unravelling the network. It is diYcult. It is going to take a long time. I do not think it can be done by military means. There has been an illusion in some quarters that military measures would be enough. Military measures can certainly assist, as it did the in the toppling of the Taleban regime which gave such valuable assistance to al Qaeda, but it is not a panacea. You cannot unravel a network which is hidden in the urban environment of cities in 60 or more countries in the world by military means. You need absolutely high-class intelligence, as Peter was arguing, and superb police and judicial cooperation to really wrap up this network, and that is why it is going to take a long time. But intelligence services are being improved. Chairman: We have to move on to Saudi Arabia. Q18 Mr Hamilton: Professor Wilkinson, in June 2003, as you already alluded to, you gave evidence before this Committee shortly after the bomb attacks in Riyadh, where 30 people were killed and I think over 100 injured. In that evidence session you 3240461002 Page Type [E] 27-06-06 00:33:14 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Ev 12 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence 19 October 2005 Professor Paul Wilkinson and Mr Peter Taylor said that you felt that the Saudi authorities appeared to have underestimated the danger of the al Qaeda recruitment and cell structure within Saudi Arabia itself. New King Abdullah recently in Saudi Arabia, in his first TV interview, vowed to crush the scourge of al Qaeda within Saudi Arabia. I wondered how much of a threat you feel that al Qaeda still is to Saudi Arabia and the monarchy there. Professor Wilkinson: I think it is still a threat, because they would undoubtedly like to undermine the royal family and change the regime radically, and that remains a key objective, but I think they have suVered some severe setbacks because there is no doubt that after the May 2003 attack in Riyadh in which 35 people were killed they cracked down on al Qaeda very hard. They have either captured or killed all but two of the top, most-wanted list that the Saudi authorities issued. That does not mean that there are no candidates for replacing them—I am sure that they are being replaced—and there are plenty of potential recruits in Saudi Arabia. We know that because of the fact that there are people who are communicating with al Qaeda and have often left Saudi Arabia to assist in projects that al Qaeda is engaged in elsewhere. We know that money is still flowing from wealthy donors in Saudi Arabia despite the Saudi eVort to regulate their charities and so on. That is very laudable but from our studies it does not seem to have had the eVect that we were hoping for. I think there is more to be done in suppressing the financial assistance that comes from wealthy Saudi supporters of al Qaeda. But there is no doubt that the Saudi authorities, from a security measures point of view, have really sharpened their eVorts against al Qaeda. Their security measures for the energy industry are particularly impressive because they recognise how damaging that would be to their economy if their energy industry was badly disrupted as a result of al Qaeda attacks. So it is a picture of improving response by the Saudi authorities but still with this problem of many potential supporters and sympathisers within their own society. I think there is sometimes a misunderstanding that Wahhabism, which is the brand of Islam which, as you know, is the dominant one in Saudi Arabian religious circles, is inevitably going to provide support for the al Qaeda movement. Actually, they are not the same thing. Wahhabism is essentially a religious set of ideas, very puritanical, very fundamentalist, if you like, but it is not a political ideology and, most to the point, it does not include the belief that you have to wage an aggressive Jihad against the rest of the world. So they are religious fundamentalists; they are not al Qaeda radical Islamists. Remember that al Qaeda’s leader is a dedicated enemy of the royal family. He was expelled by the royal family, and he feels bitter that the American forces were allowed to operate near the holy cities, which was one of the reasons he gave for starting al Qaeda in the first place. So there is no love lost between the Saudi regime and al Qaeda, and I think the Saudi regime will continue to take very determined measures, but they have this diYcult problem of the battle of ideas that has to be waged within Saudi Arabia. Q19 Mr Horam: How far are the authorities in Saudi Arabia held back by the Wahhabi context? Professor Wilkinson: I do not think they are held back in the sense of being reluctant to use the full panoply of their security measures. They talk about al Qaeda as the “deviant” group, which is in a way a sign of their contempt for the group. Q20 Mr Horam: Is that fully accepted by the Wahhabi leaders? Professor Wilkinson: Yes, that is right. They see this as a group which is criminal in nature, that has to be crushed because it is a threat to the regime, it is a threat to their economy as they see it, and a threat of course to Saudi relations with the United States and with the Western world generally. So the Saudi regime and many of the rising prosperous class of professionals in Saudi society clearly recognise that they have a stake in showing success in beating oV the eVorts of al Qaeda. Q21 Mr Horam: So is it a diminishing recruiting ground for al Qaeda? Professor Wilkinson: I think that under King Abdullah it is true to say that it will continue to be a diminishing recruiting ground because King Abdullah is a popular figure; he is particularly popular in the conservative religious circles of Wahhabism, which is the dominant religious belief system in the country, and provided the government continues to try to meet the needs of the people in economic terms and to reform, which they have promised to do, the political and economic system, I see no reason to regard Saudi as the most vulnerable of all the states in the Middle East. One could argue, tragically, that Pakistan, with its terrible problems, particularly those made much greater by the dreadful earthquake, is more vulnerable in many ways because there is a core of support for al Qaeda among some of its population, particularly up in the north-west frontier area, but some also in the big cities, and President Musharraf is so much the core of the policy of support for the Western coalition that if al Qaeda succeeded in one of their attempts to assassinate him—and they have tried several times already—I think that would have the most damaging consequences for the stability of Pakistan. Pakistan I think is very vulnerable. Let us not forget that Afghanistan is also still vulnerable because, despite all our eVorts there, despite the fact that we have troops deployed there, the Taliban, with al Qaeda under its wing, and in alliance with some war lords, is creeping back into positions of influence in some of the provinces, and that is a worrying development. It would be tragic if we allowed the situation that prevailed prior to 2001 to emerge by a process of drift. I hope that we can continue to give substantial support to President Karzai, who is very courageous, who is trying to make democracy work in that benighted country. We really need to do more for him, and if we are able to find—and I agree with Peter; it is going to be diYcult—an honourable and safe way of reducing our military commitments in Iraq, I hope we switch some of that eVort to the very desperate needs of helping security in Afghanistan. 3240461002 Page Type [O] 27-06-06 00:33:14 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Ev 13 19 October 2005 Professor Paul Wilkinson and Mr Peter Taylor Chairman: Thank you very much. I am afraid we have run out of time. We have another witness waiting patiently and we have to move on. Thank you, gentlemen, very much. It has been extremely informative. No doubt if we have any other thoughts we may be writing to you both with further inquiries on aspects of answers you gave and information that we might require. Thank you for coming and thank you for giving us so much information. Witness: Ms Nomi Bar-Yaacov, Independent Analyst, former Research Fellow for Conflict Management and Head of the Middle East Conflict Management Programme, International Institute for Strategic Studies, examined. Chairman: Can I welcome our third witness this afternoon, Nomi Bar-Yaacov. Thank you for being so patient. As you saw, we had a lot of questions and not enough time. Can we go straight in with the first question. Q22 Mr Hamilton: Good afternoon, Ms BarYaacov. It is very nice to see you here again. I wanted to ask you about Gaza. As you know, in December 2003 the Israeli Prime Minister, Ariel Sharon, proposed his plan for unilateral disengagement from the Palestinians, and the first area was to be Gaza, and after, obviously, a stormy time through the Knesset, it was finally agreed, and on 23 August Israeli troops began the evacuation and by 12 September had withdrawn from the settlements in the Gaza Strip. James Wolfensohn, the former head of the World Bank, is the Quartet’s envoy to the region. He has highlighted the need for the 1.2 million Palestinians of Gaza to see an improvement in their lives following the withdrawal. In fact, he said that in order to create greater incentive for peace amongst the Palestinians, it will be important to create jobs, develop infrastructure, oversee functioning schools and clinics and clean up vast expanses of untreated sewage. I wondered whether you could tell us whether since the withdrawal began on the 23 August and was completed on 12 September the lives of ordinary Palestinians living in Gaza have actually improved in any way. Ms Bar-Yaacov: Not yet, I am afraid. The key issue with improvement in the lives of the Palestinians in Gaza is the economy, and in order for the economy to function in Gaza the borders need to be opened. Jim Wolfensohn, who is doing a fantastic job, I think, as the Quartet envoy, is currently negotiating the openings of the crossings. First and foremost it is important to open the Rafah crossing in the south so that there will be free access into Egypt. My understanding is that he is fairly close to clinching the deal with the Israelis. As you know, the Israelis are extremely concerned about their security. There has in the past been a lot of smuggling of arms and militant terrorists through the numerous tunnels in the Gaza border. Israel withdrew entirely from the Philadelphi corridor, which is the border further south, and that is currently monitored solely by 750 Egyptian border police. That, I think, is a very positive move, because one of the concerns that we analysts raised ahead of the disengagement was that in the disengagement plan in fact they had intended to maintain an Israeli presence in the strip. So that is clear. There is no Israeli presence in Rafah either at the moment. There is talk of third-party monitoring, and that is what is currently being negotiated: what kind of monitoring, what kind of third party, what kind of scanners, what kind of overseeing monitoring mechanisms, because clearly there is a security issue there. My understanding is that it will probably be open within weeks. I do not think there is going to be a rapid improvement in the lives of ordinary Palestinians. There is the issue of job creation, which is contingent upon the issue of security. Security is a very serious issue in Gaza. As you know, following the withdrawal there has been a large number of kidnappings, and there have been armed struggles between the diVerent factions. The Palestinian Authority has not always been 100% in control. There are lots of local gangs, families that rule a number of power centres, not necessarily working with each other but very much working against each other. I think it is a matter of some hard work on the part of the Palestinians, the Wolfensohn mission, and the Egyptians. Those are the key bodies involved. Q23 Mr Hamilton: Can I follow that up by asking you whether you can tell us who is in control of Gaza if the Palestinian authority is not fully in control? How important, for example, are Hamas in Gaza? Is there an al Qaeda presence there at all? Ms Bar-Yaacov: Lots of questions! I will take one at a time and just do it in an orderly fashion. The PA, I said, is not in 100% control. It obviously has some control in some areas. Gaza is very much divided into diVerent areas. As I said, and I am just reiterating, there are a number of power bases. We saw, for example, the kidnapping and then assassination of Mussa Arafat not long ago, Yasser Arafat’s nephew. Apparently, he made 40 calls when he was kidnapped to anybody and everybody in the PA, and none of his calls were returned, which begs the question who ordered the kidnapping and the shooting, who carried it out and why the Palestinian authority, who were only 200 metres down the road, the headquarters of the security forces, did not do anything about it. That just gives you a bit of insight into how complicated it is. The thinking is that there were a number of power bases who joined forces, because Mussa Arafat was viewed as a disruptive power base and therefore they decided to eliminate him. I cannot tell you whether Hamas were involved or not. I can tell you that a number of people who work in Gaza think that they were—that they were involved, though not necessarily that they carried 3240461002 Page Type [E] 27-06-06 00:33:14 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Ev 14 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence 19 October 2005 out the shooting. I would just reiterate that there are a number of diVerent groups. Hamas certainly controls certain areas. Other Fatah militant factions control other areas. DiVerent families control diVerent refugee camps. You saw yesterday there was a kidnapping in Khan Yunis by one family, and a diVerent family was negotiating the potential release of the two Palestinians who were kidnapped. It is not very clear at any given moment. The lesson that is important to learn from all of this is that the international community, the UK government, all of us sitting here need to really strengthen Abu Mazen, strengthen the Palestinian President, strengthen the legitimate authority, in order to ensure that there will be one powerful, legitimate authority, one rule, one gun. Your other question was about Hamas and al Qaeda. Hamas, as you know, are gaining strength. They are claiming that the disengagement was as a result of their pushing Israel out of Gaza, a result of their action. They are running in the upcoming legislative elections, the January Palestinian legislative council elections, under the slogan of “Our actions are worth much more than the ten years of negotiations.” They are very much against a negotiated settlement, and that is quite a worrying aspect, one of the worrying aspects. They are gaining power also because they are seen as clean; they are not seen as corrupt. The PA unfortunately suVers from a very serious corruption problem, and Hamas do not. Hamas are viewed as the only people—because it is not just the PA; there are the diVerent Fatah factions, and they have all been tainted with corruption. Unfortunately, the Palestinian Authority has not done anything significant enough yet to show that they are actually fighting corruption. Those of us who proposed that they should actually put people behind bars, that they should try people, have a high visibility case against some of the leaders—Abu Mazen has not done it, and a serious problem remains there. Al Qaeda was your third question. Al Qaeda have a base in Sinai, Egypt, which is very close to Israel and Gaza, so the thinking is that they are trying to get in all the time. Whether they are in Gaza or not, I personally do not know. What I know is that the Israeli head of military intelligence said a couple of days ago that he believes that they have managed to penetrate Gaza. When you talk about al Qaeda, as we heard in the evidence session before me, it is not so clear exactly who we are talking about. There are a number of aYliate groups that call themselves al Qaeda, but there is a very serious and real danger that if control over the Gaza–Egypt border is not done properly, they will be able to penetrate Gaza and operate from within Gaza. That is mainly why the issue of the opening of Rafah is so serious. Q24 Richard Younger-Ross: You talked before about Hamas and its relations with al Qaeda. The previous witnesses said that they felt that Hamas was trying to distance themselves from al Qaeda. However, I note that Palestinian security oYcials in the documents we have have said that al Qaeda members were Hamas activists. Can you give us Ms Nomi Bar-Yaacov some light as to which of those views is correct, and in your view is Hamas going to operate against al Qaeda if al Qaeda is successful in penetrating Gaza? Ms Bar-Yaacov: I do not think that Hamas will operate against al Qaeda. I do not think that is the way I look at it. I think the witness giving evidence before me was 100% right in what he said, and I said exactly the same in a session here two years ago, that it is not in Hamas’s interests to aYliate themselves with al Qaeda—I am just reiterating what I said two years ago—because they do not want to meet the same fate as al Qaeda; they do not what the US to basically go after them. Their goal is limited. Hamas’s goal is a Palestinian Islamic state in the whole of Israel and Palestine. It is not an Islamist world entity in the same way that other organisations are working towards. I cannot see that there will be tension between them over this issue. The one thing is that with the internet today, with the kind of communications that we are seeing, they do feed oV each other. Hamas are picking up tips from al Qaeda and they are getting closer in that sense. But I agree; I do not think Hamas want to aYliate themselves with al Qaeda. Q25 Richard Younger-Ross: So the statement by the Palestinian security oYcer would be wrong? Ms Bar-Yaacov: What are you reading from? Q26 Richard Younger-Ross: He is not named. He is a PPC source. Ms Bar-Yaacov: I have to say I do not know what the source is. I have not heard that. Q27 Richard Younger-Ross: Can I develop on from that just on the Sinai. You made a statement there that al Qaeda is in the Sinai. Can you expand upon that? Ms Bar-Yaacov: A cell of about 30 al Qaeda members has been found recently in the Sinai. As you know, there have been a series of attacks in the Sinai against Israeli and international targets in recent months, and the thinking is that al Qaeda are trying to penetrate Israel and trying to penetrate through Gaza, but the Egyptians are the ones that uncovered the al Qaeda cell in Sinai, and it is Egypt that is mainly concerned about al Qaeda given that it is operating in Egyptian territory. Q28 Richard Younger-Ross: The attacks at Sharm el Sheikh. Ms Bar-Yaacov: Exactly, and Tabah. Q29 Chairman: Can I ask you about the relationship between Gaza and the West Bank in terms of communication between the Palestinian Authority and therefore of the groups that operate. What relationship does Hamas have from Gaza to the West Bank and how easy is it for people to operate in this context? Has that changed because of the Israeli withdrawal from Gaza? Ms Bar-Yaacov: It has changed in the political sense. As you know, there is a ceasefire that has been agreed on between the diVerent Palestinian factions, including Hamas. The problem is that Israel has 3240461002 Page Type [O] 27-06-06 00:33:14 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Ev 15 19 October 2005 been operating in the West Bank, has been carrying out targeted assassinations post withdrawal in the West Bank, and the question really is whether Hamas and other organisations will retaliate from the West Bank, since they are unlikely to retaliate from Gaza, even though they did so when there was this blunder in Jabalia camp. There was a huge procession of arms and some of them exploded, killing many Hamas people, and Hamas blamed Israel even though Israel had nothing to do with it, and then, in order to prove that they were right, they rained Kassams on to Israel, to which Israel then retaliated with great force, and I think that episode is over. So in terms of the links between the West Bank and Gaza, it is tricky because what Hamas will try to do is they will try to keep Gaza quiet so that they could consolidate control over there, but they will operate from the West Bank if there is something they do not like. They can also use rockets over the wall and hit Israel from the West Bank. The distances between the West Bank and Israel are very close, and Israel’s main concern is that they will be able to hit Ben Gurion airport, the main international airport, from the West Bank. That is the general thinking. Q30 Mr Keetch: I was astonished when I visited Israel and the Palestinian territories. You can stand by the fence, wall, whatever, and you can see the Mediterranean, and you can see the width of Israel before you. It is a very small country, an incredibly small country. In terms of how we look towards the establishment of a viable Palestinian state—because to me that is the central resolution of the problem, not just for the Israel Palestinian problem but also the wider problem about terrorism, which we were discussing earlier—if we can establish a viable Palestinian state, we are well on the way to curing international terrorism. Simply how viable is it to have a state of Palestine with two separate land areas? Could it physically work? Could it physically be created and achieved? Ms Bar-Yaacov: You mean between the West Bank and Gaza? There will have to a link, which there used to be under Oslo, called a safe passage, between the West Bank and Gaza, and that is second on the priority list after opening the external borders, the link between the West Bank and Gaza. There are discussions, again, led by Jim Wolfensohn, about what kind of passage it is going to be, whether it is going to be a rail link or a road link, whether it is going to be raised or whether it is going to be in a ditch, like a deep ditch, for security reasons. Some progress is being made on this issue. Obviously, the link between the West Bank and Gaza is absolutely essential for the viability of a Palestinian state. Q31 Richard Younger-Ross: But you believe that you could establish a viable Palestinian state if you had that link? This is something viable that can be achieved given the size of the area, the population, etc? Ms Bar-Yaacov: I think in order to have a viable Palestinian state you have to have a lot more in place. You have to have a legitimate and able Ms Nomi Bar-Yaacov Palestinian authority, one that can really enforce the law. The current one, as I said, is actually having serious problems enforcing the law. You have to have a peace agreement in place, and I cannot see a final status agreement being negotiated at present. I can see very important steps that need to be taken now in order for a final status agreement to be signed, but yes, I can see a viable Palestinian state, given the geography. Q32 Mr Maples: When Sharon announced that Israel was going to withdraw from Gaza, I think a lot of us saw that as a very constructive move, but it was greeted with deep suspicion by the PA, and Hamas and everybody else. The Committee suspended from 4.01 pm until 4.15 pm for a division in the House Q33 Chairman: In the context of the process after the withdrawal from Gaza, we understand that the Israeli government’s position is that there are no further unilateral steps, and that anything else that comes must be negotiated. Is that what you believe will happen, and is it likely, given the domestic problems within the Israeli right, within Likud, and the power struggle between Netanyahu and Sharon, that anything can be negotiated in the foreseeable future? Ms Bar-Yaacov: Again, spokespersons of the Israeli government said about two weeks ago and have been saying that there are planned further unilateral withdrawals, so the statement that everything will be negotiated has been overtaken by events. In other words, Eyal Arad, who is the senior adviser to Sharon, stated in public that there are plans to carry out further withdrawals from the West Bank if Israel deems that Abu Mazen is too weak and is not a viable partner for negotiation. So from an Israeli point of view, much depends on whether the Palestinian Authority gets its act together, presumably after their legislative elections in January, or not. Clearly, everybody’s preference would be to see a negotiated deal, to see Israeli and Palestinian negotiations resume. The question is how and under what terms. I think it would be very good for the international community to help facilitate an ongoing dialogue between Abu Mazen and Sharon. It is very helpful to have someone engaged full-time, shuttling all the time between the Israelis and the Palestinians to help them overcome the diYculties and the gaps in terms of where they are standing. The big question today, I think, is how to move the process from a unilateral one to a bilateral one, and the answer is through a third party mediator. Q34 Sir John Stanley: I would just like to ask you a number of specific questions following on from the area that the Chairman has opened up. First of all, in relation to the security wall, is it your understanding now that, though the security wall has been constructed in separate lengths, the intention and 3240461002 Page Type [E] 27-06-06 00:33:14 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Ev 16 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence 19 October 2005 policy of the Israeli government now is to fill in the gaps so that it will run essentially on a continuous basis across the West Bank? Ms Bar-Yaacov: I have a map here of the current security wall and fence in terms of where it has already been constructed and areas that have not been constructed but have been approved. The idea is, certainly on the western part of the West Bank parallel to the green line, to seal it, definitely to fill in all the gaps. The questions that remain, and are very problematic, are over east Jerusalem. There are cases pending in the Israeli Supreme Court, which sits as a High Court, currently pending, and there the wall—it is a wall in those particular areas—could potentially disrupt the peace process very seriously, and could even lead to a third Intifada, a missile Intifada from east Jerusalem and the West Bank into Israel, because the wall as it is currently constructed, and if all the gaps are filled in that area, actually cuts across east Jerusalem neighbourhoods like Abu Dis, Eizariya, Shu’afat. Part of it is constructed on a schoolyard. Palestinians living in Jerusalem with Israeli IDs with permits to work in Israel will find it virtually impossible to get to work, their kids will have to change schools, it will create tremendous unhappiness and will lead to more extremism. So I think the focus of international pressure at the moment should really be on that area, because I do not think the West Bank, western wall and fence is as much of a problem. The key lesson with the wall is really to recognise that it is a reality, that it is there; to tell the Palestinians that it is there and therefore they should negotiate with the Israelis alternative routes where they are problematic, and much more access through the wall, gates and those sort of areas. The Israeli Supreme Court has been very active in trying to strike a balance between Palestinian humanitarian needs and Israeli security needs, and that is the route through which the wall will move in order to make it somewhat easier for Palestinians to exercise their freedom of movement. Q35 Chairman: Can I follow up on the question of the route, the green line? The question of where it varies. You said in Jerusalem there was a problem, but the fundamental problem surely is that it is not on the ’67 borders. Ms Bar-Yaacov: There are a number of fundamental problems. It is a system of walls and fences; it is not just one wall, and that is partly where the problem lies. It is not as if there is just one line running parallel to the green line, sometimes on the green line and sometimes not on the green line but in Palestinian territories. There are towns like Qalqilya and Tulkarm that are completely surrounded by a sub-wall or sub-fence. The problem is not only whether it is on the green line or not, and that is clearly a problem in some areas because the Palestinian villages that are trapped between the green line and the wall or the fence in some areas. There is a recognition, I think, among the Israeli public and the Israeli political echelons that it was a mistake not to build the wall on the green line where possible. The army, when they planned the route of the fence and the wall, did not take into account Ms Nomi Bar-Yaacov Palestinian humanitarian needs. Now there is a recognition that they should have done and the Supreme Court has issued a number of judgments calling on the Israeli defence forces to move the fence and consequently, they have had to move the fence or the wall. So there is a problem there and more adjustments will have to be made. Q36 Sir John Stanley: You said that in your view it was a good idea to tell the Palestinians the wall was a reality. Do you not also think it might be a good idea to tell the Israeli government that the wall is illegal? Ms Bar-Yaacov: The Israelis know that it is illegal to build it in certain areas of the West Bank. I do not think it is illegal to build it on the international border. It is illegal to build it inside Palestinian territory. I think there is a consensus in Israel that the wall or the fence in and of itself is a good idea to prevent terror. There is a lack of consensus, and that is where there is room for movement, on the route of the fence and the wall. In terms of the advice to the Palestinian government, given that it is there, is to get them to negotiate further access through it. It is not just going to disappear. It is potentially going to move but it will not be completely dismantled everywhere. In terms of the legality of it, my personal opinion is that under international law it is legal to build a wall on an international border, but not deep into Palestinian land. That is where the mistake was made. Q37 Sir John Stanley: I may have misheard you but I do not think I did. You may just want to check this. I think you said it was legal to build it inside Palestinian territory. Ms Bar-Yaacov: No, illegal. If I said “legal” I meant to say “illegal”. I apologise for that. I will reiterate: highly illegal. Q38 Sir John Stanley: The next question I want to put to you is this. Do you agree that if you measure the number of settlers or dwellings that have been unilaterally removed in the West Bank, and I am referring particularly to the four small northern settlements, those numbers of dwellings or settlers are actually very much smaller than the number of new authorisations of houses inside the existing settlements? Do you agree with that? Ms Bar-Yaacov: Yes, I agree with that, and I think, again, the UK government and the international community should pressurise Israel to stop the expansion of settlements in the West Bank and to dismantle the illegal outposts. Q39 Sir John Stanley: Do you agree that the Israeli government’s position is that it considers it has no obligation in the peace negotiations to withdraw back to the 1967 boundaries? Ms Bar-Yaacov: No. I disagree. I think that the Israeli government’s position is that this is a matter for final status negotiations and they will negotiate that issue in the context, and only in the context of a final status agreement and not ahead of it, not now. 3240461002 Page Type [O] 27-06-06 00:33:14 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Ev 17 19 October 2005 Q40 Sir John Stanley: I am sorry if I did not put that suYciently clearly. I think you were agreeing with what I was saying. I was saying to you do you agree that the Israeli government’s position is that they are under no obligation to withdraw back to the 1967 boundaries? Ms Bar-Yaacov: According to the Roadmap, they are supposed to withdraw to the September 2001 line, so the lines that are pre the Intifida, which fall very short of the 1967 borders. The discussion today is nowhere near really whether Israel is going to withdraw to the 1967 borders or not at present, since, according to the steps of the Roadmap, which is the only peace plan on the table, there is a diVerent question of withdrawal at stake, and the current question of withdrawal is really from the three remaining Palestinian towns that Israel has reoccupied after the Sharm understandings of early on this year, of February this year. Again, I reiterate, I think Israel views the ’67 question as a final status question. I do not think that there is one opinion or another in government as to the final borders of a peace agreement. It is an issue that they view as an issue to be negotiated with the Palestinians as part of the final status agreement. The questions of withdrawal at the moment are of much smaller areas than the 1967 borders. I also want to just mention in this context that President Bush said that in his view Israel can keep some of the settlement blocs in the West Bank, which clearly means that there will not be a withdrawal to the 1967 borders if Bush’s words, which were made in a public speech in the White House, are to be taken seriously. Q41 Sir John Stanley: Finally, just on Jerusalem, do you see any possible basis under which there will be an agreed settlement in the context of Jerusalem? Ms Bar-Yaacov: I think that is the crux of the matter. I think Jerusalem is at the heart of the matter. I think it is the most important issue, and I very much hope that there will be serious negotiations on Jerusalem soon so that the matter can be resolved. Q42 Sir John Stanley: You hope that. I am sure we all hope that, but my question, which is a diYcult one, but from where you come from, with all your background and expertise and knowledge of how both sides are approaching Jerusalem, do you honestly believe there is any realistic possibility of a settlement? Ms Bar-Yaacov: I think there is a realistic possibility of a settlement, but again, Jerusalem, final borders, refugees and settlements are the four key issues for final status negotiations. They have been put in a separate category under the Oslo Agreement, under the Roadmap, and that is the current framework for peace. So unfortunately, Jerusalem is only going to be negotiated as part of the final status agreement. Yes, it is possible to negotiate Jerusalem. Yes, there is a blueprint for what could happen in Jerusalem, in the Clinton parameters, in the Tabah negotiations, in the Geneva Accords. The solution is more or less in place. Yes, I believe that there is a possible solution for Jerusalem. My question is, when will the Ms Nomi Bar-Yaacov politicians negotiate it? Not this year. The year 2006, do not forget, is an election year, both in Palestine and in Israel. Q43 Mr Pope: What eVect do you think the withdrawal from Gaza has had on Israeli public opinion? Is Israeli public opinion, strangely, taking the Hamas line that this is a humiliation for Israel, a defeat? What are some of the eVects of that, for example, on Israeli policy towards the wall? Does it make it more diYcult for Israel to manoeuvre on being more reasonable about the siting of the wall, about the line of the wall? Is it harder for the Israeli government to take a more reasonable line on that because of public opinion? Ms Bar-Yaacov: I think the Israeli withdrawal from Gaza was welcomed by the vast majority of the Israeli population. It is not seen as a Hamas victory in Israel; it is seen as a Hamas victory in Palestine, it is seen as a good move, as a pro-peace move in order to move the peace process forward. Much will depend on whether Gaza will remain quiet or not. Public opinion in Israel will sway if violence erupts either from Gaza or, more probably, from the West Bank, because it is unlikely that Hamas and other militant factions will operate from Gaza since it is in no-one’s interests to have the Israelis re-occupy Gaza. It is not in any Palestinian party’s interests and certainly not in Israel’s interests. So the leverage they have is to attack Israel from the West Bank. Much will depend on how that goes in terms of the sustainability of Israeli public opinion. At present there is a honeymoon period. Yes, this was good, but if there are more Palestinian attacks on Israelis, there will not be any further evacuations from the West Bank. Gaza really has to succeed. In terms of the wall, as I said, I think Israelis are more sensitive today than they were when they planned the route to Palestinian humanitarian needs, and many Israeli human rights organisations and humanitarian organisations are petitioning Israel’s Supreme Court in order to move sections of the fence or wall or to open gates there, and there is some room for manoeuvre there. Q44 Mr Pope: We visited Qalqilya, which you mentioned, and I think we were all quite shocked by what we saw there, the fact that the wall and wall plus razor wire entirely encircles a Palestinian town. It appears to be strangling that town. We met farmers whose land was on the other side of the barrier. We saw schoolchildren whose school was on one side of the barrier and their homes were on the other, and to get in and out it takes around two hours. It seems to me that if the Israelis’ point in this wall and the barrier was security, then this is entirely self-defeating because the kind of anger that this engenders, the obvious injustice of it, can only fuel violence. Is there a growing acceptance in Israeli public opinion that the existence of the wall in places like Qalqilya is an aVront to normal human rights? Ms Bar-Yaacov: I think Israeli public opinion is so much in favour of the construction of the wall that not that many people have examined the precise route as in Qalkilya, which I mentioned here a 3240461002 Page Type [E] 27-06-06 00:33:14 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Ev 18 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence 19 October 2005 couple of years ago, and Tulkarm, and now I mention east Jerusalem because that is, as I see it, the most serious problem. I think it could lead to a third Intifada. I think, precisely like you, that it does not meet long-term Israeli security goals. If the problem of the sub-fences, the system of fences encircling certain areas like Qalkilya, like Tulkarm, like east Jerusalem, is not resolved, the Palestinians will eventually resort to violence and maybe even soon. Q45 Richard Younger-Ross: Just coming back to Gaza and the movement of the Israeli settlers out of Gaza, some of those had already been moved once from previous settlements. Do we know where they have gone to? Are any of them settling in lands which the Palestinians are still going to want back in the West Bank and other places? Ms Bar-Yaacov: No. It was one of the issues that everybody feared, that the 8,000 were moved to the West Bank, but in fact they have not. Many of them are still in hotels and many of them are in Ashkelon, which is a town just north of Gaza in Israel proper. I do not think there is a serious risk that they will move to settlements in the West Bank. I think the Israeli government knows that that is not advisable. Q46 Richard Younger-Ross: On a totally separate issue, in terms of the wall and the wall alignment, it has been put to me at a meeting here some time ago that the construction of the wall actually aligns with water courses but the water courses tend to pop up on the Israeli side of the wall and not on the Palestinian side of the wall. Do you have any evidence of that? Ms Bar-Yaacov: There are some areas in which there is a water problem. As I said, the best study on this was done by OCHA, the OYce for Co-ordination of Humanitarian AVairs of the UN in Jerusalem, and they are negotiating with the Israeli army the specifics of these issues. I think there is a problem there and I think to a certain degree it is being addressed. It is being addressed in the sense that it is out in the open and there are negotiations going on on this matter. I am not sure that it has been resolved. Q47 Chairman: Can I take you back to the Palestinian Authority. You said at the beginning it was necessary to strengthen Abu Mazen. Can you tell us your assessment of the internal struggle that is going on. You have made some references to it. How serious is this factionalism within Fatah? Is Fatah capable of in eVect taking on and defeating Hamas, or is it more likely that elements within Fatah will be aligned to Hamas in a new political configuration? Could you clarify the diVerences in the politics on the Palestinian side between the West Bank and Gaza. The popular view is that Hamas is very strong in Gaza, Fatah is very strong in the West Bank, but that is a caricature. Could you give us your expertise on that. Ms Bar-Yaacov: Hamas is stronger in Gaza than it is in the West Bank, but there are certain towns in which diVerent factions of Fatah in the West Bank rule and certain municipalities in the West Bank in Ms Nomi Bar-Yaacov which Hamas have won municipal elections. The third round of the Palestinian municipal elections is scheduled to take place in December, and it is widely expected that Hamas will win a number of key municipalities in the big towns in Gaza but not necessarily the West Bank. In that sense, the caricature is actually right. By and large, Hamas have more power in Gaza, although its power in the West Bank should not be underestimated, plus their ability to operate out of the West Bank should not be underestimated. In terms of the in-fighting in Fatah, it is a very serious problem. Fatah is extremely disorganised. They are going to hold a convention, their primaries, only after the legislative elections. It is not clear yet how many lists they will run under but, unlike Hamas, who are extremely well organised and basically put together a onecandidate per list and then everybody falls in under that, Fatah ego and pride is very diVerent. What happens is if a candidate is not top of the list, he then runs as an independent, so you get Hamas fractured into ten diVerent independent parties, where everybody knows you are Fatah but you could not take being number two on a list so you decide to set up your own party, and you have too many parties running and that is extremely problematic. There is also the distinction old guard/new guard, the young Palestinians versus the old ones, and the problem of corruption within primarily the old guard. Since noone has done anything about the corruption, people like, for example, the current Prime Minister, Ahmed Qorei Abu Ala, is viewed as extremely corrupt. No-one is willing to take him on, and if he decides to run in a separate list, that will split and splinter Fatah, and that is not a good thing. Marwan Barghouti, who is in prison, is most likely to be the head of the list, and he is most likely to win many, many votes and to operate from prison through Qaddura Faris or other emissaries, but I would rate the problem with inside fighting in Hamas and lack of loyalty, a certain dysfunctional structure that everybody operates for their own good. There is not a good co-operation between the diVerent ministers. The situation is serious. On top of that you have the Fatah militant factions, who do not even consider Abu Mazen, so to speak to be Fatah. They take the law into their own hands, and they are armed; they are not willing to disarm. Abu Mazen tried to co-opt them and buy them into mainstream Fatah and they refused. I am speaking primarily of the Al Aqsa brigades. They have a gang mentality. They are loyal to their own gang master. They are certainly not loyal to Abu Mazen. So in that sense Hamas are much better organised plus, as I said before, they are clean. They do not suVer from that tainted image that unfortunately Fatah have earned themselves. Q48 Chairman: Could the Israelis then actually be more likely to get an agreement with Hamas than with a disputatious and divided Fatah? Ms Bar-Yaacov: No. Hamas is not interested in negotiating. Hamas’s charter, which I have in front of me, the be-all and end-all of it is that peace negotiations are just something they would not even consider, and they consider totally wrong, and Israel 3240461002 Page Type [O] 27-06-06 00:33:14 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Ev 19 19 October 2005 will exist and will continue to exist until Islam will obliterate it, just as it has obliterated others before it. It has extremely racist statements against the Jews, “the cowards would never sleep” and things like that, in its oYcial covenant. No, I do not think peace negotiations with Hamas are on the agenda, unless Hamas change their charter, disarm and sign a document which states that they are renouncing terror and interested in a peaceful way to resolve disputes. Q49 Chairman: I put the question because some people have the view that somehow that would be the best solution, but I agree with your view. Can you also, while we are on this problem, deal with this. Are there other groups apart from Hamas and the Fatah groups that are significant players in this process? Ms Bar-Yaacov: Fatah and Hamas are the main actors in the process and, to go back to Hamas, there is a debate as to whether they would be willing to transform into a political party, and if they do, whether they will be able, as I said, to give up their arms, to change their charter and to renounce terror and potentially negotiate. So there are issues that have to be worked on with them. There are other groups but they are smaller groups. As I said, there are local gangs everywhere. They certainly have power. Al Aqsa brigades are quite an important spoiler; there is Palestinian Islamic Jihad; there is the PFLP. Those are groups that carry out suicide bombings inside Israel so you cannot ignore them as a force in the equation. Q50 Chairman: Some of them are based in Syria or in Lebanon. Ms Bar-Yaacov: Some of them are headquartered in Damascus. Hamas have links both to Damascus and to Beirut. Most of them are Iranian-funded. Iran is one of Israel’s main concerns. You have just come back from there, so you know all too well how serious the problem is. Q51 Ms Stuart: That actually leads on quite interestingly from what you have just said, looking beyond Israel and Palestine to outsiders. There is this common perception that Egypt plays an incredibly important role in the whole development of the Middle East, having the elections and things, but how would you assess Egypt’s role, positive or negative, towards a final solution? Ms Bar-Yaacov: Extremely positive. I think Egypt— and I said this here two years ago—have done over the last two years an amazing job, so I just reiterate it and strengthen it. I think Egypt has played a Ms Nomi Bar-Yaacov crucial role in the ceasefire negotiations of the diVerent factions in Gaza and the West Bank. I think they know the situation on the ground in Gaza and they have the ear of the Palestinians and the trust of the Israelis. They are in a unique position because it is also a strategic interest of theirs. They have a border with Gaza. They have a very good intelligence service so they know what is going on. They have the power. I would rate their role as absolutely critically important. The only potential problem in Egypt is the democratisation process because with this initiative of the greater Middle East, as you know, it is easier said than done, and it is potentially giving legitimacy to small, very extreme parties in Egypt that are very anti-Israeli. That is the only caveat that I would raise, more so long term, but I would rather raise it now, because those parties are not interested in peace with Israel. The peace Israel has with Egypt is a cold peace, a strategic interest peace. It is not a warmth of the parties or the two states really coming together. They have very little in common, but they are interested in a stable Palestinian entity. Q52 Ms Stuart: Strategic interests are by far more durable than feelings of warmth. Could the UK do more to strengthen their hand in terms of democracy-building in Egypt, which must be the long-term prospect, and may not always be necessarily as much welcomed by those in power now? Ms Bar-Yaacov: I am not sure what the UK is doing in Egypt at the moment, to be honest, so it is hard for me to assess. I know what they are doing vis-à-vis the Israeli–Palestinian conflict, and that is they are giving 100% backing to Egypt and a lot of encouragement and support. In terms of the democratisation process in Egypt, as I said, I really think it has to be treated with silk gloves. The only advice I can give the British government is to map out what this actually means, not only for Egypt internally but for the whole region, because it has a potential to destabilise, not only to stabilise. Q53 Ms Stuart: If you think of something, let us know. Ms Bar-Yaacov: OK, I will send it in. Q54 Chairman: I think we have come to the end of our session. I would like to thank you for your answers and giving us a very useful briefing. Some of us will be travelling to the region in the next few weeks, and so hopefully we will be able to get there better informed than we otherwise would have been. Thank you for coming. Ms Bar-Yaacov: Pleasure. Thank you very much. 3240461003 Page Type [E] 27-06-06 00:33:14 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Ev 20 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Monday 24 October 2005 Members present: Mike Gapes, in the Chair Mr Fabian Hamilton Mr John Horam Mr Eric Illsley Mr Paul Keetch Mr Andrew Mackay Andrew Mackinlay Mr John Maples Sandra Osborne Mr Greg Pope Mr Ken Purchase Ms Gisela Stuart Richard Younger-Ross Witnesses: Mr Jack Straw, a Member of the House, Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth AVairs, Mr David Richmond CMG, Director General Defence and Intelligence, and Dr Peter Gooderham, Director Middle East and North Africa, Foreign and Commonwealth OYce, examined. Q55 Chairman: Good afternoon everybody. This session gives us an opportunity to question the Foreign Secretary and senior oYcials about the foreign policy aspects of the war on terrorism. We are very pleased to have you before us, Jack, I know you have been travelling across the Atlantic, no doubt that might come up at some point in our questioning. Can I just ask you briefly to introduce your two colleagues? Mr Straw: On my left is David Richmond, who is Director-General Defence and Intelligence and on my right is Peter Gooderham who is Director Middle East and North Africa. Q56 Chairman: Thank you very much. If I can begin by asking about the current increase in terrorist attacks both in this country and worldwide. We have just got news of these appalling bombings in Iraq today. It is clear to us, and we had evidence last week from Peter Taylor and Professor Paul Wilkinson, that the fight against international terrorism is going into a new phase and is probably more diYcult. Could you tell us, do you think we are winning in this fight against international terrorism and have things changed since the period around 9/11 to the current situation? Mr Straw: First of all, we have just had news of this bombing of a hotel in Baghdad, one which is used by journalists. The fact that there appear to have been at least 15, if not many more, fatalities indicates the indiscriminate nature of these terrorists, who really do not mind who they kill provided they kill somebody in the name of a totally perverted ideology. It is a further illustration of the evil which we are dealing with. I do not want to use the phrase that you used and it will be for historians to judge whether we have been successful in this overall fight. What I do believe is that the strategy which we have embarked on—which is dealing directly with terrorism in this country and anywhere else—where we have a direct involvement, indirectly by international engagement and sharing of intelligence and resources with our international partners, as well as seeking to deal with the causes of terrorism, for example, in the work we have done over many years to support the Middle East Peace Process, the very act in engagement of the United States and United Kingdom Governments, Colin Powell, Secretary Condoleezza Rice, myself in the Peace Process in respect of Kashmir, many other theatres, and the work which we and the UK Government are doing both with the Home OYce and the Foreign OYce to improve understanding of Islam and to give those who are of the Islamic faith greater confidence to stand up against these evil people; all of that is the only strategy that is sensible to follow. One other thing I simply say, in preparation for this session I was looking down a list of all the sites where there have been terrorist outrages over the last 12 years. It is everywhere: Tokyo, Saudi Arabia, Tanzania, Kenya, Aden, obviously the World Trade Centre, Karachi, Bali, Mombasa, Riyadh, Casablanca and Jakarta. This is a worldwide problem and it requires real international eVort. Q57 Chairman: You referred to the causes, one of the things that strikes me is the way in which the people who justify these actions use all kinds of diVerent excuses or reasons and one of the things they are very eVective at is a propaganda campaign whereby they talk about events that happened in Timor or Kashmir, you mentioned, or the Middle East or even Andalusia and the 1450s in the period in Europe. Do you think we are doing enough to counter this propaganda? Mr Straw: I think we can never do enough to counter the propaganda, it is a most extraordinary moral relativism. We have to counter it and we have to say there are some absolutes in our society. Society cannot work unless we are clear what the diVerences are between good and evil and this terrorism is evil. I was reflecting on this in the context of the visit I made over the weekend to Birmingham, Alabama. They had the most appalling racism there which escalated until a church was bombed, four little girls got killed. You could oVer explanations as to what was in the minds of the people who planted those bombs, but whatever explanations you oVer you cannot conceivably justify that. You could oVer explanations as to why there was a climate in which extremism came to the fore in Germany before the War and plenty of historians have said that the international community shared responsibility for making the situation worse than it might have been following the Treaty of Versailles. All that said, you 3240461003 Page Type [O] 27-06-06 00:33:14 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Ev 21 24 October 2005 Mr Jack Straw MP, Mr David Richmond CMG and Dr Peter Gooderham cannot possibly excuse or justify Naziism. It was simply a straight forward evil and the evil that was being carried out was far greater than any of the problems it was designed to overcome; the same is true with this terrorism. What I know, having charted it before and after September 11, is that these people are so evil they will seize on any excuse or none. They will seize on an excuse, injustice in Palestine, injustice in Chechnya, injustice in Kashmir. Those excuses have gone and we are working very hard, certainly in respect of the Middle East, and in respect of Kashmir we have some influence, obviously it is for the Russian Federation to resolve the Chechnyan situation but if they have gone, they will seize on some other excuses. Now, for sure, in order to ensure that their recruiting sergeants are less successful, and for many other reasons, we need to secure a just settlement between the Israelis and the Palestinians in respect of the Middle East, and for example, between the Indians, Pakistanis and the Kashmiris in respect of Kashmir. We would be naive if we thought if we eliminated those problems, this infection will go, it will not. Q59 Ms Stuart: Can I follow on this. Given that it is an engaging of the minds in the long-term and we need to work with the BBC, and you say we have spent £10 million on this but we also need to build nation states in some areas like the Balkans, is it therefore wise for the Foreign OYce to withdraw grant-in-aid for organisations such as the British Association for Eastern and Central Europe, which has got a proven track record in terms of money spent, it spends very little money, but does exactly what is needed and has shown that they can do it? Mr Straw: By pure chance, I am going to have a short meeting with Lord Radice straight after this session if it does not go on too long and I am not caught up in a vote. With particular grants-in-aid it is likely there will come a moment when there will be a judgment that maybe their usefulness has run its course, and that is the issue here. I need to talk to Lord Radice before coming to a final view. Ms Stuart: I think as a matter of record I had better declare that myself and a fellow Member of the Committee, Paul Keetch, are trustees of the organisation. Q58 Chairman: We are spending billions of pounds in various theatres on military activities, Afghanistan, Iraq and elsewhere, yet we do not spend even a very small percentage of that on propaganda, communications, media. I will give you one example: the BBC Arabic television service which has not yet been established and would cost far less than we spent even in a very short period in pursuing the war in Iraq. Do you think we get our priorities right? Should we be shifting resources more into the other areas? Mr Straw: There will be an announcement by the BBC World Service tomorrow about the future of their programming. I do not want to pre-empt that, but I think this Committee will find that of interest. The second thing is that, however, we should not see the BBC as part of a “propaganda eVort”, there is a strong case for a BBC Arabic television service, but the BBC’s credibility will be severely undermined if people thought that it was simply a mouthpiece of the British Government or even of the British Parliament. Yes, we fund it, it is on my vote but we have got to be very, very careful about the nature of the relationship in order to preserve that independence for the BBC which is a watch word around the world. We spend quite a lot of money— £10 million—on a programme called Engaging the Islamic World, which I do in my part of the Islamic world on a day-by-day basis. I have received none of this £10 million, let me tell you. We spend £10 million and that is a big increase in the amount we have been spending in terms of engaging the Islamic world with all sorts of programmes, and we have given you details of those. I am also clear that if we want to engage the minds of people in the Islamic world we need to see better progress, for example on the Middle East Peace Process and, knock on wood, the prognosis is much, much better than certainly it was two years ago or a year ago. Q60 Mr Purchase: Over centuries we have been used to dealing with people dissatisfied for one reason or another, usually because of some massive inequalities in the society the people inhabit. We have dealt with it because it is rational and we can say that we can create an improvement. Now we seem to be facing not a rational demand for improvements but a demand from a religion which will not be satisfied until its religion is accepted as the only religion throughout the world. Are we getting to a point where we might just expect terrorism to continue? We cannot prove that there is not a God and ask them to pack up their terrorism. Mr Straw: I do not think it is a demand from a religion. That is to admit that these evil people speak in the name of Islam, which no decent Muslim I know believes and none of the rest of us believe. There is overwhelming warrant from the Holy Koran to show that is simply not the case. If you are asking is this appetite for terror by some of these individuals ever going to be satiated, not by the key individuals I do not think. I think they are as fanatical—to use a comparison—as some of the Nazi leaders were at the end, they have tasted blood, they have enjoyed it, and get huge power from killing and they want it to go on and on and on. I think that we can succeed against their foot soldiers, both in dealing with it on a security basis but also in making it clear to people that this provides no hope whatever for them. If you go back to where you started, which was Iraq, we knew that there was likely to be an increase in terrorist incidents in Iraq right through the democratic process, the elections earlier in the year, the setting of the constitution, this referendum and then if the referendum leads to a yes, the full constitutional elections on 15 December. The terrorists are desperately trying to stop this democratic process taking place. Why? Because they know that if the democratic process in Iraq embeds itself then their opportunities to rule this country 3240461003 Page Type [E] 27-06-06 00:33:14 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Ev 22 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence 24 October 2005 Mr Jack Straw MP, Mr David Richmond CMG and Dr Peter Gooderham through terror rather than through democracy are much, much more limited. You will then see that some of those who for odd reasons fear or— Q61 Mr Purchase: What do they want? What is the demand? Mr Straw: For that you would need to go on to the website of al Qaeda related apologist organisations, and there are many of them. Some of them want to establish a caliphate across the Islamic world, they want to exclude all infidel disbelievers. Bear in mind, however, that these people claim not only that everybody around the table—I do not see a member of the Islamic faith around the table—and those of us of other faiths are infidels but also those who do not follow their very extreme brand are also unbelievers. It is fanaticism on fanaticism. It is for that reason that there is increasing rejection by a vast majority of people in the Muslim community of this hijacking of their religion. Q62 Mr Keetch: Foreign Secretary, I want to turn to Iraq because obviously we are here to discuss the foreign policy aspects of the war against terrorism. I want to place Iraq in that context. Obviously you and I took a diVerent view in the run-up to Iraq and you won the vote. I do not want to re-rehearse those arguments, nor do I necessarily want to go through the arguments about what is happening in Iraq at the moment. There are some very good signs of political process, there are some less good signs such as the bombings this afternoon, et cetera. I want to put Iraq in the context of that overarching war against terrorism. You were absolutely right when you said that terrorism had occurred before then and certainly after 9/11 President Bush assembled huge world support for that campaign. The front page of Le Monde said “We are all Americans now”. My concern at the time, and my continued concern, is that Iraq has been a distraction from that campaign against terrorism that has led us down a path that has taken resources, money and eVort that should have been concentrated on that much wider picture. Therefore, I firstly want to ask you, in the run-up to Iraq what was your assessment of that engagement on its eVect on the war against terrorism? Did you actually believe that by invading Iraq it would improve the security situation in the United Kingdom and improve the war against terrorism? Or were you warned, or was there a suspicion, that this attack on Iraq by itself might in some way undermine the overall war against terrorism? Mr Straw: I never, ever believed that military action was a “distraction” from the war on terrorism, let us be clear about this. Also, bear in mind—you said you were not going to re-rehearse what happened but you have just done so—we only came to the decision about military action very late and very reluctantly. It was after the failure of the Security Council on 7 March 2003 to agree a Second Resolution, albeit the modified one which I put forward, and then the announcement by the French President on the tenth that whatever the circumstances he would vote no, that we were then into a situation when seven days later after the Cabinet’s decision and then Parliament’s decision the next day to take military action. I believed, and I still believe, that the military action that we took in Iraq was justified on the basis that was set out: noncompliance by Saddam of about a dozen Chapter 7 Resolutions. By all means read the speeches I made in the Security Council and the ones that I made in the House. That was the focus of what I spoke about. I do not happen to think this is an either/or. Also, although self-evidently there are, and remain, security challenges in Iraq, I believe that the only way we are going to get relative peace and security across the Middle East is through democracy. We are seeing the beginnings of this. Some of the things that have happened are quite remarkable, such as what is happening in the Lebanon. Who would have said that the Lebanon, whose nationhood has been and is still denied by Syria, it was run by Syria as a fiefdom, would now be emerging into full independence. Some of those who kept the Lebanon as a fiefdom are now under the most serious spotlight from the international community. Q63 Mr Keetch: I am sorry, I asked about our action in Iraq and the eVect of that action against terrorism. Mr Straw: What I am saying is we are seeing the beginnings of a movement for democracy which I believe is the only sure way of eliminating terror and alongside that the lack of progress in the Arab countries, which is another cause or contributor to the environment in which terrorism can breed, is through democracy. We would not have got to where we have got to in Iraq, a release of Iraq from tyranny, and the most terrible tyranny, state terrorism, to a situation where just two and a half years later we are awaiting the results of a democratic referendum in which, according to the latest reports, nearly 10 million people have voted; up from 8.6 million in January. It is going to be hard going in Iraq, the terrorism will continue for some time, but I also believe that historians are likely to judge that this has led to the establishment of a democratic and stable state. I would also add this: nation building is never easy. There are those who think what happened after the war was what was left of the German Government surrendered and then, hey presto, very quickly after that you had the building of a German state. That is not true. There were no national elections in Germany for four years. The Marshall Plan after two years arose because of the real concern about the chaos of reconstruction. Austria was under Allied rule for 10 years and it did not become a nation for 10 years. There was a similar situation with respect to Japan. In all countries which have emerged from such tyranny you are going to have a period of transition. All are diVerent. I am not saying that Iraq is Germany or Germany is Iraq, but there are lessons from each. Q64 Mr Keetch: In terms of my question I assume that the Foreign oYce did consider what the eVect of the war on terrorism would be by invading Iraq. Your assumption was that it would not make the overall war on terrorism worse. 3240461003 Page Type [O] 27-06-06 00:33:14 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Ev 23 24 October 2005 Mr Jack Straw MP, Mr David Richmond CMG and Dr Peter Gooderham Mr Straw: In the run-up to as serious a decision as military action you are bound to look at all possible consequences. Did we believe that taking military action would make the overall terrorist situation worse? No, we did not. That was our judgment. Others around the system may have taken a diVerent view but I know that we did not. disproportionately say they opposed the Iraq War but they are not taken in by all this propaganda from terrorists, apologists for terrorists and others, and they were able to make a mature judgment. They could see what we had been doing in respect of the Middle East, in respect of Kashmir and much else, and came to the conclusion they did. Q65 Mr Keetch: I am grateful for that. We had some very interesting evidence last week from Professor Paul Wilkinson from the University of St Andrews. Let me just quote what he said in his paper to us: “One of the most significant developments in the evolution of al Qaeda since 2003 has been the way the movement has exploited the allied invasion and allied occupation of Iraq. Whatever view one may take on the decision to invade Iraq, it is simply ignoring the reality to deny that the invasion and occupation have been a big boost for al Qaeda and a setback for the coalition against terrorism.” What Professor Wilkinson is suggesting is that the images of British and American troops in Iraq are fuelling abroad what he calls a “domestic jihad” and increasing the unhappiness and frustration felt by Muslims in our own country and other countries and that process has increased and has made the overall war on terrorism worse. I presume you would disagree with that? Mr Straw: It is self-evidently the truth that al Qaeda et cetera are exploiting what is going on in Iraq. They are also exploiting what is going on in Saudi Arabia, in Indonesia, in Egypt and in Russia. Q67 Mr Keetch: I am grateful. The other answer to a question last week from Mr Taylor of the BBC was that Iraq was also providing a training ground for terrorists, that they were able to get involved in terrorism and then come back from there to Europe and, indeed, a senior French judge made a similar point last week. Again, is it your belief that people actively involved in terrorism against coalition forces in Iraq are gaining from that experience in their perception and then returning back to the United Kingdom and other parts of Europe? Mr Straw: I have to say—Mr Richmond can correct me if I am wrong—I have seen no evidence at all to suggest that people have been trained within Iraq and are coming back here. The potential areas of training and potential—Have you seen any? Mr Richmond: No. I think it is something that we worry about but we have not seen any evidence of it. Q66 Mr Keetch: But there are not British troops there. Mr Straw: That is my point. There are no British troops there but they are exploiting them. Indonesia was against the Iraq War; it has suVered continuous al Qaeda inspired terrorism. Saudi Arabia was not happy about the Iraq War; it suVered terrorism. Egypt was not happy about the Iraq War; it has suVered very recently serious terrorist outrages within its territory. The Russian Federation was against the Iraq War; it has had to deal with the most appalling terrorism. In each state these people seek to justify their terrorism by anything that they can find. On your point about is this aVecting the Muslim population in this country, opinions will diVer. I keep in very, very close touch with communities of the Islamic faith in my own constituency; if I did not I would not be here. It is the third largest Muslim population in a constituency proportionately of any in the country. There were several candidates at the last election, six against me. All six said they opposed the Iraq War, including a Conservative, let me say. This will all be in published oYcial documents. All six said they opposed the Iraq War and all six said that the way to emphasise opposition, particularly among the Muslim communities, was to vote against me and vote me out of oYce. My majority went down from 9,000 to 8,000. I ended up with a very significant level of support amongst the Muslim communities. Why? Yes, if you did an opinion poll amongst the Muslim communities in Blackburn they would Q68 Mr Maples: The Iraqi constitution has been rejected by the overwhelming majority in two of the Sunni provinces. If it is rejected in a third, which looks highly likely in Nineveh in the next two or three days, what are we going to do? Mr Straw: We say this is democracy and if you invite people to vote— Q69 Mr Maples: I have asked you what we are going to do if it is rejected. Mr Straw: We then allow the constitutional arrangements to go ahead. There will be elections in any event on 15 December. This is factored into the constitution. If a referendum fails it may be something which people regret but this is democracy. What we will also do is point out to Sunnis who may have been reluctant to have been involved in the elections back in January that it is far better for them to make use of democratic arrangements to resolve the conflicts which they have with the Shias and the Kurds than it is to support violence. This is democracy working. Q70 Mr Maples: Of course I understand it is democracy working but our collective policy has been to develop the constitution and to get it approved. If it is rejected and there are new elections for an assembly, are you saying that new assembly is more likely to be able to reach a constitutional settlement? Mr Straw: Even if the referendum passes and the constitution comes into force, there will have to be quite a number of further amendments made to the constitution almost certainly. I think that there is a provision—I can be corrected on this—that these changes would have to be put to a further referendum within four months. If there is not a yes vote then there will be a further interim government 3240461003 Page Type [E] 27-06-06 00:33:14 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Ev 24 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence 24 October 2005 Mr Jack Straw MP, Mr David Richmond CMG and Dr Peter Gooderham elected on 15 December and the constituted assembly has a year in which to come forward with changes to the constitution which will then go to a further referendum. Those who are busy seeking immediate stability, particularly those in the Shia and Kurdish populations, obviously would have wanted to see a yes vote. It is also the case, and we know this for certain, that there will be a very large majority of Iraqi voters who will have voted yes in the elections but this arrangement by which twothirds of voters voting no in three provinces could block a constitution was agreed, ironically, for the benefit of the Kurds originally when the Transitional Administrative Law was developed in the summer of last year and there is no reason at all why other groups, particularly the Sunnis, should not be allowed to use it. You were then asking what I think will happen. What I think will happen is that there will be further negotiations between the Sunnis and the Shias to try to arrive at a solution satisfactory to both sides. Interestingly, things were moving in that direction in the run-up to the referendum so that there were further amendments made. They were supposed to be signed oV in the middle of August but all through last month and the beginning of this month further amendments were made. We will see that process continuing, I think. Q71 Mr Maples: It seemed to me that it was entirely foreseeable that this was going to happen, the Sunnis not participating fully in the constitutional process, and that the result of this will be the deferral of a solution for at least a year, if not longer, and during that time the stability will get worse, which will encourage the terrorists into thinking that they have succeeded in one of their objectives, and the likelihood of the country breaking up into these three or perhaps more constituent parts will be far greater. Mr Straw: I do not accept that. Q72 Mr Maples: You do not think any part of it will break up? Mr Straw: First of all, we do not know what the result is going to be. It is clear that in Ambar 97% of voters have voted no, we are told, and in Salahuddin it is 82%. There is an issue at the moment about what has happened in Nineveh which is the area around Mosul, which is a mixed area, and we do not know whether or not there is going to be a yes or a no vote and, if it is a no vote, whether it is a no vote by twothirds. I spoke to UN Secretary General Kofi Annan— Q73 Mr Maples: We are working on the basis of if it is a no vote, what will happen? Mr Straw: I spoke to Secretary General Kofi Annan yesterday and on Saturday about this because it is in everybody’s interests that the process of checking should come to a close as quickly as possible. I do not accept your rather apocalyptic view about what is then going to happen. I just say this: you have to trust the people to come up with the result that they want. Q74 Mr Maples: The result they may want is three separate constituent states. Mr Straw: One of the things they are all agreed on is that there has to be a single Iraq. It is also fundamental to the international community. The Kurds are not campaigning for a separate Kurdistan. They know in any event the consequences of that in relation to Turkey and Iraq would be very, very severe. If you talk to Mr Barzani, President Talabani and the other leaders of the state KDP, they know that whatever historical aspiration they may have had. The Shias also know that once a full democratic system of government is established, because they are 60% of the population, where the politics turns on people being Shia rather than Sunni or Kurd, it is going to hold sway, so what on earth is in it for them to break up this country which anyway has been a single unity since the break up of the Ottoman Empire. My point back to you, Mr Maples, is this: from the point of view of the international community there is plainly a hope that the electoral and constitutional processes can proceed smoothly if there is a yes vote but if you give people a vote you have to accept the answer that they come up with. It is not the end of the world at all if the answer is no. It is anticipated in the drafting of the Transitional Administrative Law and in the constitution. Also, when I talk to our people in Baghdad what they say to me is in practice the diVerence between having a yes vote in terms of time and tidying up the constitution then and having a no vote and having to make some amendments to agree to a further consensus would not be quite as long as people anticipate. Q75 Mr Maples: They would be radically diVerent outcomes. Can we turn briefly to Basra because we were congratulating ourselves until quite recently that we had done rather well in the southern part of Iraq and it was much more stable and we seem to have done that by working very closely with the main Shi’ite group. However, now we seem to have a situation in which the various Shi’ite groups and militias have fallen out among themselves stirred up by Iran which was not happening until a few months ago and the same animosity towards British troops is now being demonstrated there as it has been for two and a half years in the other parts of Iraq against the Americans. It seems to me that we have got almost as bad a situation there as the United States has got in the Sunni triangle. Mr Straw: I think it is very important not to generalise and that also applies to the areas under the direct control, as it were, of the American troops. American troops have got a relatively good level of consent in some provinces and some parts of some provinces and obviously poor consent in other parts. My understanding so far as Basra is concerned is, yes, there was a particular problem with this section of the Iraqi security forces and some dominant individuals, but it is by no means universal. I would also just say to you, Mr Maples, although I think all of us are very proud indeed of the way in which our troops have operated seeking to build consent, they 3240461003 Page Type [O] 27-06-06 00:33:14 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Ev 25 24 October 2005 Mr Jack Straw MP, Mr David Richmond CMG and Dr Peter Gooderham have always made it clear that if necessary they will be very firm and very tough, and that was why they took the action that they did about three weeks ago. Q76 Mr Maples: Obviously we hope that will be the outcome. We now have a situation in which the insurgency seems to be worse in most Sunni parts than it has been before, the constitution is almost certainly, I would suggest to you, going to get rejected, and we now have chaos and fighting in Basra with Iran stirring up trouble there in a way that I do not think any of us had foreseen. Is it not really time that we admitted we went to war here for all the right motives but, nevertheless, there were not any weapons of mass destruction. We have fundamentally miscalculated and misunderstood the nature of Iraqi society and the potential for divisions within it and the potential for insurgency. Would it not help us to get from here to a satisfactory exit if we admitted that we had made those mistakes? Mr Straw: If we thought that, and evidently you do, yes, but I do not happen to think it. Q77 Mr Maples: You do not think we have made any mistakes? Mr Straw: That is a separate issue. If you are asking me whether I think we made any fundamental mistakes in the overall strategy, no, I do not. If you are asking me day-by-day whether there are things we could have done better with the benefit of hindsight, of course that is the case, it would be arrogant to say otherwise. You could come up with a catalogue of bad news but what you omitting in all of this is the most important message of all this year, 2005, which is this: the Iraqis have embraced democracy. People said we did not understand the nature of Iraqi society, meaning that we did not understand that they did not really want to be democrats; that they did not have any interest and they just wanted to be dominated by tyrants. Well, eight and a half million Iraqis proved those people wrong on 30 January, and 10 million proved them wrong again on 15 October. The Iraqis want what we take for granted, which is the right to run their own aVairs; and it is called democracy. We are seeking to support that process, a process that is also backed by the United Nations. Although you are right to say that there were big divisions in the international community and nationally over the rightness or wrongness of military action, post-war we have been there on the basis of United Nations Security Council resolutions. The key resolution now, Resolution 1546, was passed in June last year unanimously, and it is that which provides the mandate for the multinational force and the electoral timetable and institutions. Q78 Richard Younger-Ross: Pursuing the point on Basra, I had the privilege to visit there just after the fighting finished and saw what an excellent task our Forces were doing. I have to say that they were clearly not fully prepared for the task in front of them, because the Government had clearly not thought about the fact that it needed extra DFID help and advisors in relation to police and other areas. However, the Forces did a magnificent job in dealing with the local tribal issues and working with the local community. There has clearly been a deterioration in the relationships between our Forces there and the local authorities. What is being done to build those bridges? Mr Straw: A great deal, and I can let the Committee have a detailed note about that, if you wish, Mr Chairman.1 Our people, both in the military and in the Consul General in Basra, as well as in associated government agencies like DFID, are alive to the need to have the best possible relationships with local leaders. As Mr Maples has indicated, part of what happened is that, in his phrase, some local leaders “fell out”, and there is going to be a lot of vying for power because people see that power is shifting from the rather tyrannical arrangements that people knew about under Saddam and what has been there subsequently to democratic processes, which are far better but slightly less certain. There will therefore be a lot of vying for power going on, and that is what we have had to cope with. For reasons I have already explained to Mr Maples, I do not take an overly pessimistic view about the longerterm prognosis there. Q79 Richard Younger-Ross: Are we not in a position where the clerics and the extreme clerics will say, “They came here; they promised us water and electricity; they have failed to do those on time and they are still not working properly; they promised us this and that, and they have not delivered”? Are we not, particularly in terms of security, actually giving extra credit to the clerics to put us in a bad light? Mr Straw: There are two things: to the extent that the reconstruction process has lagged behind is all down to security. The other thing that has happened for the good—and this has been, again, a very big change in the last year—is that approximately 170,000 more Iraqi security forces have been trained up. Their ability to operate independently of the US, UK and other coalition forces varies considerably. There are two battalions that can operate entirely independently, but a great many can operate eVectively with backing from the coalition. That has been a big change. The progress with the defence forces has been better than progress with the police in some areas where problems remain. On the point about the clerics, it is quite important to appreciate that some of those whom you describe as clerics are a very powerful, moderating force within Iraqi society, in this case amongst the Shia. Without Ayatollah Sistani’s great wisdom and judgment, I think that we would be in a rather more diYcult position. It is the nature of that society that a lot of the leaders are clerics. Let me say that it certainly was the case in my party, and in yours, for a very long time, that the protestants and non-conformist churches played a leading part in our—well, this is true! People used to say of the Church of England that it was a Conservative Party of prayer. It does not lie in our mouth to pretend that we are a wholly 1 Ev 36 3240461003 Page Type [E] 27-06-06 00:33:14 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Ev 26 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence 24 October 2005 Mr Jack Straw MP, Mr David Richmond CMG and Dr Peter Gooderham secular society where organised religion plays no part in politics, because it does play a very important part. Q80 Richard Younger-Ross: I very carefully used the word “extreme” before the word “cleric”. I appreciate that a large number of them are working and are a moderating force. However, I am concerned that more power is being given to those who do not wish to see the sort of democracy that we wish to see, but wish to go back to the sort of democracy they have in Iran, rather than the democracy you described earlier. I fear that we will move towards a new Vietnam where these other groups, which cannot agree to the model of democracy— Mr Straw: It is good for a headline in the liberal news, but it is complete nonsense. Q81 Richard Younger-Ross: Liberal Democrat! Mr Straw: It is complete nonsense. The parallels are about zero, with great respect to you. Just look at the fact that you have now got a UN-backed democratic process. There was not ever a single United Nations Security Council resolution in respect of Vietnam. Everybody is agreed in the Security Council about the strategy needed to put Iraq on a settled path. The two other things I say are these: there is not seen to be any particular appetite amongst Iraqis for setting up a structure similar to that in Iran. Although it is true that the majority of Iranians are Shia, and in the south and other parts of Iraq a significant proportion of the Iraqis are Shia, the Iraqis are Arab and the Iranians are not Arab, they are Persian. This division between the two is not accidental but is quite powerful, and there are other reasons that explain the nature of the Iranian constitution, about which I would be very happy to bore this Committee at some length. The Iraqi constitution states in the opening articles—and I paraphrase, but only a little—that it should take account of the Islamic heritage of Iraq; but it also states that it should take account of democratic rights and human rights. The architecture of the document is not one that makes this an Islamic state in the classical sense that you see in Iran or, in a diVerent way, in Saudi Arabia. Q82 Mr Illsley: In regard to the Basra situation and the incidents on 19 September, just how big a disappointment was it that the newly-trained police forces seemed to be in alliance with the militias in the handing over of British troops to those militias? Mr Straw: It obviously was a disappointment. It was aimed at one particular section of the police force. There was disappointment, and we have to deal with that. We hoped that it would be otherwise. Chairman: We are moving to Iran now. Q83 Andrew Mackinlay: I will come on in a moment to IAEA Security Council’s atomic weapons, but in recent weeks the Prime Minister, yourself and the Defence Secretary have indicated a fear that some of the ordinance and planning and preparation and some of the personalities involved in attacks upon British soldiers and coalition forces in Iraq and other malevolence around the region has been from Hezbollah or Iran. I note that you said at a press conference that the explosives that killed at least eight British soldiers originated from Hezbollah or Iran. That is pretty definite. Downing Street/the Prime Minister have been fairly strong, but in some parliamentary exchanges the Defence Secretary seemed to slightly pull back from that. I do not mean this in any spiteful way, as you would know, but there does seem to be a degree of ambiguity. I wonder if you could take this opportunity to share with us what you do know. Is it Hezbollah or Iran, and if it is the latter to whom does one look? At what level is this and to what extent are the fingerprints of the Iran regime on this? Mr Straw: There is a degree of ambiguity about this, Mr Mackinlay, because there is a degree of uncertainty about it. We believe, from forensic examination of these improvised explosive devices, that they are similar to or the same as those used by Hezbollah; and it appears that they can be traced back to Iran. We do not know about the timing and we do not know directly about any involvement by the Iranian Government, but it is suYcient for us to be concerned about it and we have made representations to the Iranian Government. I think I have probably said enough about that; we just state that there is not a continuation of these devices. Q84 Andrew Mackinlay: Turning to suicide bombers, there have been press reports, which are not vague reports, about how the regime and organs of the regime, including Iran’s newly-installed Defence Minister, had both invited volunteers for suicide bombings and celebrated them. A celebration is planned on 30 October in Tehran, which, by definition, must have at least the tacit support of the regime, entitled Men of the Sun. They are going to celebrate suicide operations at this celebration, encouraging people to sign up for martyrdom-seeking operations. The Defence Minister has indicated support for this kind of activity. What do we know about this; what representations have we made; and is this not something that really puts that regime beyond the pale? There are very few regimes, and certainly they are regimes that you would not do business with, that are actively encouraging and promoting the concept of suicide operations around the world and around the region. Mr Richmond: It is worth remembering that they were using suicide bombers in the Iran/Iraq war, and it is quite a long tradition. These people have been celebrated, and there is a foundation that looks after wives and dependants and so on; so this is something that has existed in Iran quite some time. It is true to say that recently more publicity has been given to this, but you have to see what they did rather than what they wrote in their newspapers. Mr Straw: It is slightly more complicated because of the Iran/Iraq war. We look to the Government of Iran to take the same unambiguous view of terrorism that all other countries do. A point I often make to Iraqi interlocutors is that with their very active support and encouragement when I was 3240461003 Page Type [O] 27-06-06 00:33:14 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Ev 27 24 October 2005 Mr Jack Straw MP, Mr David Richmond CMG and Dr Peter Gooderham Home Secretary, at the request of my then predecessor the late Robin Cook, I banned, under the Terrorism Act, the Iraq/Iranian terrorist organisation MEK—and it is still banned. I also banned in the same list the military wings of Hamas and Hezbollah. The Iranian Government give very active support to Hezbollah and some support to Hamas, and we think they should desist from that because you have to be unambiguous in your approach to terrorist organisations. That is a conversation that continues to happen with the Iranians. Q85 Andrew Mackinlay: And the PMOI were banned—or is that the MEK? Mr Straw: Yes. Q86 Andrew Mackinlay: I do not want to labour the point, but it seems to me that that should be revisited. Mr Straw: You are not supporting this terrorist organisation— Q87 Andrew Mackinlay: I am certainly not, no. Mr Straw: Okay. Q88 Andrew Mackinlay: But, equally, since— Mr Straw: Did NCRI fund— Q89 Andrew Mackinlay: The answer is “no”, but the point is that I certainly think we should always revisit those which we ban. Mr Straw: There are provisions in the Terrorism Act 2000, if organisations want to make representations— Q90 Andrew Mackinlay: Perhaps I can go, as I promised you, to the question of development of nuclear weapons. The IAEA has been unambiguous in its condemnation of Iran for non-compliance. There is now talk about the matter being referred to the Security Council, which seems logical. The anxiety which some have is that it will go to the Security Council, and then there will be impotence; because if the Security Council stands by the IAEA and shows robustness, there is very little that the international community can do. Is that not the case? Where are we on this? How can we contain and control Iran on development of nuclear weapons? Mr Straw: First, let me just say where we are. We do not know for certain whether Iran is developing a nuclear weapons capability. What we do know for certain is that over a 20-year period they failed to notify the IAEA of very large developments at Isfahan and Natanz of conversion and enrichment facilities and other matters. We also know that they were in close touch with A. Q. Khan, who is the man who was in the lead in developing the Pakistani bomb and who then decided to go into business selling nuclear weapons technology. We know they experimented in polonium and plutonium, and there is also a large question mark as to why they need such large fuel cycle facilities to create nuclear fuel when they only have one nuclear power station at Bushehr. That power station is being built under contract with the Russians, and the Russians are under contract to provide fuel for it; but they have no other power stations ready to go, and there are none in development either. Those are the question marks. You talk about impotence, but the record of the IAEA on Iran is one of the strength of the international community in support of one of the world’s most important international treaties, the Non-Proliferation Treaty. Where are we? When we started this in the immediate aftermath of the Iraq war, Dominic de Villepin, Joschka Fischer and myself thought there was every prospect that Iran would exploit the divisions in the international community and carry on regardless. They have simply not done that, and we have been able to achieve a situation where the enrichment of uranium is suspended. That remains suspended. What we also achieved for a period was the suspension of the conversion facility at Isfahan. The Iranians made the decision to restart that on 2 August this year; and it is because of that that we have a problem. As you say, Mr Mackinlay, when this came before the IAEA board of governors there was a vote of 22 in favour of declaring Iran non-compliant. There was one against, which was Venezuela, and the rest abstained. That was quite a shock to the Iranians because they thought that the most votes we would muster would be 18, and in fact if Venezuela had not voted against we would have ended up with a consensus. That is where it is at the moment. Enrichment remains suspended and further conversations are taking place. I hope that it is possible to resolve this matter within the board of governors of the IAEA, but the statutes of the IAEA provide that if such matters cannot be resolved, then there can be a reference to the Security Council. As to whether that is necessary or when it would take place is a choice that we would make, and we would certainly not announce it in advance. Q91 Mr Pope: You have said on a number of occasions that it is inconceivable that military action would be taken against Iran, and whilst I am sure that is true at the moment, it presumably really is not the case if one looks to the future. I cannot see Israel, for example, standing by and allowing Iran to develop a nuclear weapons capability; and for that matter I cannot really see the United States allowing that to happen. My point is that it is not inconceivable. Mr Straw: Mr Pope, I speak for the British Government; I do not presume to speak for the Israeli Government; they have to make their own decisions. It was in the context of the nuclear dossier that I made those remarks. The second thing to say is that people need to chill a bit on this. Military action is not on anybody’s agenda with respect to Iran, and that has been made clear repeatedly by the American Government and clearly by Condoleezza Rice yesterday at the joint interview I did with her from Birmingham, Alabama. It is simply not on the agenda. There is always a caveat entered on behalf of the President of the United States, who is also Commander in Chief, which I understand; but it is not on the agenda of the American Government and 3240461003 Page Type [E] 27-06-06 00:33:14 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Ev 28 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence 24 October 2005 Mr Jack Straw MP, Mr David Richmond CMG and Dr Peter Gooderham it is not on our agenda or anybody’s agenda on the board of governors. My judgment is that we have to work extremely hard to resolve this by diplomatic means. What I do know is that where we are united—and we have been until very recently completely united—we can get a long way. I also know that the Iranians were surprised and a little chastened by the extent to which we got, not unanimous support in the last board of governors, but very significant and substantial support, which they thought would go their way. Q92 Mr Pope: The Committee visited Iran and went to Tehran and Isfahan about two years ago. It was quite a friendly visit, certainly in comparison to when we went to France at about the same time! Mr Straw: I shall make sure that our Ambassador in Tehran tells the Iranian Government that. Q93 Mr Pope: I know that you have invested quite a lot of time and eVort personally in the UK relationship with Iran, but I just think that over the last two years things have deteriorated somewhat. There was the case of the British soldiers who were kidnapped in the Shatt al-Arab waterway. Mr Mackinlay has pointed out that there is compelling evidence that Iranian-produced or Iranian-financed weapons have been used against UK forces south of Iraq. It seems to us that our diplomatic relationship is not as good as it was two years ago when we went there. Would you characterise it thus and, if so, what can we do about it? Mr Straw: There has been a diYcult period in the relationship between Iran and the international community; and just bear in mind that every move that the United Kingdom has made has been in concert with France and Germany, and through that E3 arrangement the rest of the European Union as well. If people say, “What is the point of EU foreign policy?” this is the point of EU foreign policy. Increasingly we have had the active support of the United States Government, backing our proposals. We are working at improving co-operation with the Russian Federation as well as other countries. Iran had elections; they were imperfect elections because of their constitutional system, but they produced a result in which President Ahmadinejad took oYce. It is a new government. I was present at the United Nations General Assembly when he made the speech that he did and set out his stall. It is a more diYcult environment than it was two years ago; however, that is not a reason for abandoning the diplomatic route. You have to try and understand where the Iranians are coming from. Iran is a very proud nation, with a very fine past. It is also a nation which, for rather good reasons, has felt that it has been over-dominated by great power politics in turn by Russia, by the United Kingdom and by the United States; and that is part of their national consciousness, as is this very powerful sense of their own national dignity. You have to take that into account. The argument over the Non-Proliferation Treaty is complicated. The Iranians say: “Article 4 of the Non-Proliferation Treaty entitles us to the full panoply that is necessary to generate electricity by nuclear power.” On the face of it, that is correct. However, there is an obligation under Article 2 not to do anything towards developing nuclear weapons capability. The intersection of these two comes at the point of the fuel cycle, and that is why there is such anxiety about the use to which the Iranians are intending to put the fuel that they would generate. That is what we have to work on. As far as I am concerned, and I think I can speak for the French and German Governments and for Javier Solana, we are just going to keep going on this. Q94 Mr Hamilton: Following on from what Mr Pope has just said about the possibilities of military action or otherwise against Iran, I am sure you will have heard of the Heritage Foundation, the right-wing think-tank in Washington— Mr Straw: Are they supporting me? Q95 Mr Hamilton: I do not think they are not supporting you. It has a great influence on President Bush’s policies, and I am delighted to hear what Condoleezza Rice has said about the possibility of any kind of military action against Iran. However, as you may recall a few weeks ago, Dr Nile Gardiner, someone we met a couple of years ago in Washington, was on the Newsnight programme. He told Jeremy Paxman that it is about time we stopped using the carrot and waved the stick at Iran; in other words, we would have to do something quite radical to stop them developing nuclear weapons if they did not stop of their own accord. Are you worried by that? Do you think that his views are likely to penetrate the White House at some stage and force them into military action if Iran does not go along with the IAEA? Mr Straw: He has his point of view. Was that the programme that I was in? Q96 Mr Hamilton: No, it is one that I was on actually—helping you! Mr Straw: Thank you very much. Let me just repeat the position of the American Government, which was spelt out yesterday, and before, by Secretary Rice. She said that military action was not on the agenda of the United States at this time. She went on to say words to the eVect that the United States Government had been giving support for the E3 process; they have done so, and we are very grateful to the United States Government for that support. Each resolution that we have had before the board of governors has also been actively supported by the United States. That is where we are. As I say, one can endlessly speculate. I think I have made our position fairly clear. I believe that the diplomatic route is the right one. It is not just about diplomacy across a table; it is about the pressure that one can exercise through the international community on a country like Iran. It could also be exercised on us in diVerent circumstances. It is about the power of the United Nations system that we are dealing with here. 3240461003 Page Type [O] 27-06-06 00:33:14 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Ev 29 24 October 2005 Mr Jack Straw MP, Mr David Richmond CMG and Dr Peter Gooderham Q97 Mr Hamilton: In other words, you are still wholly committed to constructive engagement, which is the British Government’s continuing policy in Iraq. Mr Straw: Let me say that for all sorts of reasons sometimes it is hard going with Iran, but I happen to be committed to it, and I happen to think that it is far better than the alternative. Q98 Ms Stuart: If none of that pressure works, surely the minimum is the end of the NonProliferation Treaty? Mr Straw: It may be the end of the NonProliferation Treaty; it depends on the circumstances. Meanwhile, there are other challenges for the Non-Proliferation Treaty. Only three members of the United Nations have not signed up to the Non-Proliferation Treaty but they all have a nuclear weapons capability, so trying to deal with that is also something we have to factor into our approach. Q99 Mr Mackay: Foreign Secretary, I want to bring you on to another problem state in the region, namely Syria, whose regime, quite rightly, has had the international spotlight focused on it particularly in the last few days. I would appreciate your comments on the German Prosecutor’s findings. We all recall that he was doing this at the request of the Secretary General of the United Nations, which confirmed that Syria was intimately involved in the assassination of Prime Minister Hariri in Beirut back in February, and that against the backcloth that the Interior Minister Kanaan seems to have conveniently committed suicide in the last few weeks and against a backcloth of the serious allegations, which appear to be very well-founded, that a significant number of members of Saddam Hussein’s regime are being harboured in Syria with no eVort to bring them to justice. Finally, there is the backcloth that security advisors say to us that almost certainly the Syrian border is the most porous and the most dangerous border with Iraq, and I would appreciate your comments. Mr Straw: The findings of the Mehlis Commission are very serious indeed. They are so serious that Secretary Rice and I have agreed that there should be a ministerial meeting of the Security Council, and we are currently fixing up a date for that very shortly, providing we can get other member countries on board for that. This report that I have in front of me requires an answer to the international community. You cannot have a member of the United Nations that has subscribed to the Charter of Human Rights, and much else besides, deciding that the way it resolves its problems is having people, at least at a pretty senior level, complicit in the murder of political opponents in a country that is regarded by every other member of the United Nations as independent; this is simply intolerable. We have to meet and decide what to do next in respect of the conclusions of the Mehlis Commission. There is also, let me say, business in respect of Resolution 1559. We are dealing with two resolutions here. Resolution 1595 was the one that established the Mehlis Commission and Resolution 1559 was an earlier resolution that required Syria to remove its troops and its penetration of Lebanon altogether. It has made some progress on that and has certainly removed its troops, but it still has to do a very great deal more, including recognising the Lebanon as an independent member of the United Nations, and put embassies into Beirut and exchange ambassadors. These are very elementary matters, but very important matters. On the second point you raised, Mr Mackay, about penetration of the border, you are right to say that this is the most dangerous and most porous border into Iraq. The Syrians have taken some steps to improve security and cooperation across the border, but they have got to take many more. Dr Gooderham may wish to say something more about this. An associated point is that they have got to be categorical in ceasing to allow Syria to be used as a base for Hamas and Islamic Jihad. It is almost a joke in the Arab region, and regarded as such, when Syrian leaders say that Hamas and Islamic Jihad are not allowed to operate from Syria. I recently met a very well-known, senior Arab journalist, who got out his pocket book and said, “if I want to talk to leaders of Hamas or Islamic Jihad, I phone these numbers in Damascus; I am told that they have moved; I then leave a message and they phone me back within five minutes from Damascus.” It is a charade but it is all part of the same problem. Doctor Gooderham: As the Foreign Secretary said, there is some evidence that Syria has taken some steps with respect to its border with Iraq, but the sense we have is that those steps have been halfhearted, grudging and tactical in nature. What we have been looking for is a strategic decision on the part of the regime in Damascus to get to grips with the problem of the insurgents coming in and out of Iraq and Syria; and so far we have not seen that. We continue to press for it. Q100 Mr Mackay: Foreign Secretary, that is an appropriately robust response that you have given, and I commend you for it. Does that mean that your answer on Syria is the same as the one you gave on Iran, when a colleague a few moments ago asked if we would take part in any invasion—that we would take part in any invasion of Syria or taking out certain key people from Syria? You were very specific about Iran and said that there were no plans, that it was not on the agenda; that we should cool it, calm it. Is that what you mean for Syria? Mr Straw: As I said, we are at the moment in discussion with the Americans and other partners and drafting a response that will go before the Security Council. Let us take these things one step at a time. Q101 Mr Mackay: That is a very interesting answer. The last question, which perhaps you can answer slightly more fully than that, is this. Your relationship with your opposite number in Damascus must be— 3240461003 Page Type [E] 27-06-06 00:33:14 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Ev 30 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence 24 October 2005 Mr Jack Straw MP, Mr David Richmond CMG and Dr Peter Gooderham Mr Straw: Dr Farouk al-Shara? Q102 Mr Mackay: They must be very ragged now in the light of this report. Is it worthwhile keeping up diplomatic relations at the moment with Syria? Mr Straw: As it happens, I have not seen Dr Farouk al-Shara since I saw him at the conference earlier in the year in Sharm e-Sheikh. My judgment is that it is worth keeping up diplomatic relations with Syria, and I would certainly not wish them to be brought to an end unilaterally. We keep up diplomatic relations with a great many countries, for example Burma— although I am not comparing them directly—but we do so because we think it is worthwhile—and with Zimbabwe. Q103 Mr Purchase: The answer that Mr Mackay described as interesting was also unconvincing. People will be extremely concerned, following President Bush’s remarks in regard to his view of Syria. We do need some assurance that it is not the intention of the British Government to be led by the nose into an attack on Syria. We have been there before, and many people would be very unhappy if they thought we were going there again. Mr Straw: Let me assure you, the issue—we are talking about diplomatic decisions being made within the United Nations system. There has been no discussion that I have taken part in with the United States about military action in respect of Syria—none whatever. I do not think it is on their agenda either; let us be clear about that. Q104 Mr Purchase: The President seemed to put it on the agenda. Mr Straw: Well, I provided the reassurance that Mr Mackay sought. Iraq was Iraq, and we supported—I know you did not, but the British Parliament supported the judgments that we made as a government in respect of Iraq. We did it in a very open way. We had three debates running from September 2002 to March 2003, with votes; and it could not have been done in a more open way. Again, we made our judgment, and we happen to think it was the right one. People can discuss, as it were, the counter factuals, and if we had not supported the United States I think the situation would have been altogether worse. That is where we are. On these other issues we are working very carefully and well with the United States Government. Judge them by the decisions they have made. With respect to Iran, judge the United States by the fact that it has given us increasing support for the E3 EU process notwithstanding the fact, as I was agreeing with Mr Pope, that the environment has become more diYcult not less diYcult. In respect of Syria we have a problem. It is a problem for the international community. Resolution 1559 was cosponsored originally by France and the United States, with us coming in behind. France has been as much in the lead on this as has the United States. I have just come from a commemoration service at St Paul’s Cathedral to commemorate the 60th anniversary of the foundation of the United Nations. What we all know about the United Nations is that where it works together it is a force for good, without the necessity for military action. In respect of Iraq, if we had ever been able to get that second resolution with an ultimatum, the chances are that we would not have had to go to war, as a matter of fact; but there we are! You do not have to have these on the agenda particularly where you have good, strong backing in the international community. Q105 Sandra Osborne: I would like to ask you about the issue of extraordinary rendition. In response to this Committee’s report of last year on the war against terrorism, the government said that it was not aware of the use of its territory or air space for the purposes of extraordinary rendition. However, it appears that there is a growing body of evidence to suggest that the UK air space is indeed being utilised for this purpose, albeit mainly in the media. Some of the suggestions seem to be extremely detailed. For example, the Guardian has reported that aircraft involved in operations have flown into the UK at least 210 times since 9/11, an average of one flight a week. It appears that the favourite destination is Prestwick Airport, which is next to my constituency, as it happens. Can you comment on that? What role is the UK playing in extraordinary rendition? Mr Straw: The position in respect of extraordinary rendition was set out in the letter that the head of our parliamentary team wrote to Mr Priestley, your Clerk, on 11 March; and the position has not changed. We are not aware of the use of our territory or air space for the purpose of extraordinary rendition. We have not received any requests or granted any permissions for use of UK territory or air space for such purposes. It is perfectly possible that there have been two hundred movements of United States aircraft in and out of the United Kingdom and I would have thought it was many more; but that is because we have a number of US air force bases here, which, under the Visiting Forces Act and other arrangements they are entitled to use under certain conditions. I do not see for a second how the conclusion could be drawn from the fact that there have been some scores of movements of US military aircraft—well, so what—that that therefore means they have been used for rendition. That is a very long chain! Q106 Sandra Osborne: The UN Commission on Human Rights has started an inquiry into the British Government’s role in this. Is the Government cooperating fully with that inquiry? Why would they start an inquiry if there were no reason to believe that this was actually happening? Mr Straw: People start inquiries for all sorts of reasons. I assume we are co-operating with it. I am not aware of any requests, but we always co-operate with such requests. Q107 Mr Keetch: They are not flying under US military flags; these are Gulfstream aircraft used by the CIA. They have a 26-strong fleet of Gulfstream aircraft that are used for this purpose. These aircraft are not coming into British spaces; they are coming 3240461003 Page Type [O] 27-06-06 00:33:14 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Ev 31 24 October 2005 Mr Jack Straw MP, Mr David Richmond CMG and Dr Peter Gooderham into airports. Some are into bases like Northolt, and some into bases like Prestwick. Whilst it is always good to have the head of your parliamentary staV respond to our Clerk, Mr Priestley, could you give us an assurance that you will investigate these specific flights; and, if it is the case that these flights are being used for the process of extraordinary rendition, which is contrary to international law and indeed contrary to the stated policy of Her Majesty’s Government, would you attempt to see if they should stop? Mr Straw: I would like to see what it is that is being talked about here. I am very happy to endorse, as you would expect, and I did endorse, the letter sent by our parliamentary team to your Clerk on 11 March. I am happy, for the avoidance of any doubt, to say that I specifically endorse its contents. If there is evidence, we will look at it, but a suggestion in a newspaper that there have been flights by unspecified foreign aircraft in and out of the United Kingdom cannot possibly add up to evidence that our air space or our facilities have been used for the purpose of unlawful rendition. It just does not. Q108 Mr Keetch: I accept that, but if there were evidence of that, you would join with us, presumably, in condemning— Mr Straw: I am not going to pre-judge an inquiry. If there were evidence, we would look at it. So far there we have not seen any evidence. Q109 Richard Younger-Ross: Our former Ambassador to Uzbekistan, Craig Murray, has stated in a document to us: “I can confirm it is a positive policy decision by the US and UK to use Uzbek torture material.” He states that the evidence is that the aircraft that my colleague referred to earlier, the Gulfstreams, are taking detainees back to Uzbekistan who are then being tortured. Is that not some indication that these detainees are being transferred through the UK? Mr Straw: It is Mr Murray’s opinion. Mr Murray, as you may know, stood in my constituency. He got fewer votes than the British National Party, and notwithstanding the fact that he assured the widest possible audience within the constituency to his views about use of torture. I set out the British Government’s position on this issue on a number of occasions, including in evidence both here and to the Intelligence and Security Committee. I wrote a pretty detailed letter to a constituent of mine back in June, setting out our position. As I said there, there are no circumstances in which British oYcials use torture, nor any question of the British Government seeking to justify the use of torture. Again, the British Government, including the terrorist and security agencies, has never used torture for any purpose including for information, nor would we instigate or connive with others in doing so. People have to make their own judgment whether they think I am being accurate or not. Q110 Mr Illsley: Foreign Secretary, the letter which you supplied to the Committee in March which gave the conclusion that the British Government is not aware of the use of its territory or air space for the purpose of extraordinary rendition was taken at face value by most members of the Committee at that time, before the election. We took that to mean that we were not aware of any extraordinary rendition, and that it was not happening. The press reports were therefore something of a surprise. Would our Government be contacted by any country using our airspace, taking suspects to other countries? Would we be asked for permission or would there be any circumstances where we would be contacted; or is it the case that it could well be happening but that our Government is not aware of it simply because we have not been informed, or our permission is not necessary? Mr Straw: Mr Illsley, on the precise circumstances in which foreign governments apply for permission to use British air space, I have to write to you, because it is important that I make that accurate.2 What Mr Stanton on my behalf said in the letter is exactly the same: why would I, for a second, knowingly provide this Committee with false information, if I had had information about rendition? We do not practise rendition, full-stop. I ought to say that whether rendition is contrary to international law depends on the particular circumstances of the case; it depends on each case, but we do not practise it. I would have to come back to you on that question. Chairman: We will expect a letter. Thank you very much. John Horam, Afghanistan. Q111 Mr Horam: Foreign Secretary, there are worrying signs of deterioration there, are there not? Mr Straw: Well, the situation— Q112 Mr Horam: Did you say there are not? Mr Straw: I am sorry, I am not quite sure what signs you are referring to. Q113 Mr Horam: The strengthening of the Taliban and al Qaeda and the evidence that the sort of methods used in Iraq are now being used in Afghanistan. Mr Straw: There has been a terrorist problem in Afghanistan from the time that the Taliban were, in the main, defeated. When I visited Kandahar in the summer of 2003 there had been a bomb in a mosque the day before, and some people had been killed and a large number of people had been injured. Indeed, I saw many people who had been severely injured laid out in a field hospital in what had been the departures lounge of Kandahar International Airport—so this had been going on for some time. The better news, Mr Horam, is that there has been the presidential election. We have now had the parliamentary and provincial elections, with the final results expected by the end of this month. The first session of the parliament will be on 19 December, and that will mark the culmination of the political tract of the Bonn process. If you think about where Afghanistan was four years ago, this is a dramatic improvement. Nobody would then argue— 2 Ev 36 3240461003 Page Type [E] 27-06-06 00:33:14 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Ev 32 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence 24 October 2005 Mr Jack Straw MP, Mr David Richmond CMG and Dr Peter Gooderham Q114 Mr Horam: I accept entirely that point, but equally the evidence we have to set against that is that there are clear signs that the Taliban and al Qaeda are reviving, certainly in some provinces. Is that right? Mr Straw: I do not have the precise figures about Taliban activity. It is certainly the case that they are not completely defeated, and there remains quite a serious challenge. That is something we need to deal with, along with our American colleagues and those—as you know there are two operations; there is ISAF and there is also Operation Enduring Freedom, which is based on Kandahar. Q115 Mr Horam: Presumably, the Nato Secretary General, Jaap de Hoop ScheVer’s argument that they must increase the amount of military capability there from 10,000 to 15,000 is presumably working on the assumption that unless it does that, the situation will get worse. Mr Straw: There is the issue of terrorism and there is also the issue of ensuring that the writ of the elected government runs. Q116 Mr Horam: They are linked, are they not? Mr Straw: They are in some areas and they are not in other areas. Q117 Mr Horam: They are linked in the problem areas. Mr Straw: In ensuring that there is eVective order. As you will know, Mr Horam, we are proposing to do two things: we propose to put the ARRC in from May 2006, and then to increase our total forces quite substantially. Q118 Mr Horam: Have you got a figure for that? Mr Straw: There is a figure but I am not certain whether I am at liberty to issue it, because it is a matter for my colleague John Reid. I am told sotto voce that an announcement will be given later this week. Q119 Mr Horam: Are we going to have to make a bigger eVort to further improve the situation in Afghanistan? Mr Straw: Yes. Q120 Mr Horam: Are we going to make a big eVort? Mr Straw: This is now becoming almost a cliché, but whilst in Iraq their fear is of occupation; in Afghanistan the fear is of abandonment. In Iraq— Q121 Mr Horam: How would you feel that the situation in Afghanistan has suVered as a result of their abandonment by the attention being drawn to Iraq? Mr Straw: No, I do not think that. Q122 Mr Horam: You just said it was, that— Mr Straw: I said that the Iraqis fear occupation. I am dealing with diVerences in the political and psychological make-up of the Iraqis as opposed to the Afghans. Whilst the Iraqis fear occupation, as I say—they wish that our troops to leave as quickly as possible once the security situation is better; in Afghanistan they fear abandonment because they saw what abandonment— Q123 Mr Horam: But they fear abandonment because we have abandoned them to some extent. Mr Straw: No, it is to do much more with what happened over a thirty-year period, when in fact the international community did abandon them in the mid seventies, and then in turns they were left to the devices of the Soviet bloc and then there was, as it were, this interim strategy of funding Mujahadeen, which then morphed into the Taleban; so it was not altogether satisfactory. I am simply making the point that this is a long-term commitment by the international community and by the UK, both in terms of money and in terms of our military presence; and there is going to be this announcement. Q124 Mr Horam: What do you think is the biggest problem in Afghanistan now? Mr Straw: Well, there are a number of linked problems. There is the problem of terrorism, of drugs, of corruption and of poor governance. Q125 Mr Horam: They are pretty big problems. Mr Straw: Of course they are big problems, but if you go to where the country started four years ago, these are problems that can be overcome. Significantly, the Afghans are embracing the idea of democracy, just as they are in Iraq. Q126 Mr Horam: But my point is, can you make the kind of big or significant increase in eVort there to deal with the problems you have just outlined in Afghanistan, while at the same time being committed to a situation in Iraq, which is as diYcult as it is? Mr Straw: Yes, and if you are asking me about troop numbers, obviously if you want detailed information you need to ask the Defence Minister. Although our commitment in Iraq remains substantial, our troop numbers are now well below 10,000; and bear in mind that at the height of the war there were 46,000 troops in theatre. The judgment of John Reid and of the Chief of Defence StaV is that the increase in troop numbers that will be announced for Afghanistan later this week is one that can be sustained—and that is their judgment not mine! Q127 Mr Maples: I wonder whether we could move to some other parts of the Middle East, particularly Saudi Arabia and Egypt. One of the things that this Committee has been interested in, and so has the Government, is the process of what one might broadly call Arab reform, reforming Arab countries, both in terms of their economy and in terms of development of government, human rights and governance. If we take those two specific countries— I know that there are others but Saudi Arabia and Egypt seem to me to be the most important—do you think we are seeing real progress? There may be diVerent answers to the two questions, but are we 3240461003 Page Type [O] 27-06-06 00:33:14 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Ev 33 24 October 2005 Mr Jack Straw MP, Mr David Richmond CMG and Dr Peter Gooderham seeing real progress, both in terms of economic and political reform? I do not mind how slow it is, but do you think things are happening? Mr Straw: I think there is progress being made. Egypt, as you will be aware, has begun multi-party elections. It has been slow process. Doctor Gooderham: In respect of Egypt, we have already had the presidential elections, and the country is now gearing up for the parliamentary elections, which will take place in three stages, three periods. I would agree with you: it is a significant development, what we saw both in the presidential elections and what we are now expecting to see in the parliamentary elections. There is clearly a development towards more democratisation in Egypt. Saudi Arabia of course is further behind, but it has now held municipal elections, and the government there does appear to be committed to what I think is fair to describe as an evolutionary approach to further democratisation in that country. I suspect that it will be fairly slow, but I think that the new King, King Abdullah, has gone on the record to say that they want to move this forward. Q128 Mr Maples: One of the things we have discussed before on this subject is the view that I take, and which I think a lot of others share, that there are some pretty fundamental things that have to be in place before democracy is going to work, for example the rule of law, a relatively incorrupt government, a private sector with a growing middle class, if one wants to put it like that. Are we seeing evidence of developments in good governance, lack of corruption, objectivity and the rule of law? Those seem to me in some ways to be more important than the actual elections, at least in this stage of the process. Doctor Gooderham: I think we are seeing patchy progress. We have to be realistic. Obviously, we would like to see more progress more quickly, but I think you can point to some countries where the processes are improving all the time. To refer back to what the Foreign Secretary said earlier, the fund that we have available in the FCO, the Engagement with the Islamic World Fund, and the £10 million that the Foreign Secretary referred to—we are using a lot of that money for precisely projects designed to bolster rule of law, the participation of women in the political and democratic processes in various countries in the region; so we are doing what we can. Q129 Mr Maples: I am sure we are doing a lot, but do you think there is a recognition on the part of the governments of Saudi Arabia and Egypt—and again there may be diVerent answers on both—of the need to move down this track? If they want to become part of the mainstream world and become prosperous with growing economies do they recognise that these are essential ingredients; or do you think that that is not really how they see it, and that they think, “oh, gosh, I suppose we had better do something because the British and the Americans are pestering us about it”? Doctor Gooderham: No, I think that there are signs, particularly in Egypt, where President Mubarak has said repeatedly that this is the direction he wants to take Egypt in; but they will have to go at their own pace, and that is reasonable. They need to gauge how much progress they can make at each stage. Obviously, we have been doing what we can to encourage the process of democratisation. We are not alone; there is a G8 process that is active; but we are very careful to put that in the context of encouragement rather than trying to impose or direct, because that would clearly be counterproductive. Q130 Mr Maples: Do you think that in terms of economic development the governments of countries like Egypt and Saudi Arabia look around the world and ask, “How is it that Malaysia, South Korea, China and India can start making this phenomenal economic progress, and we make none; if we did not have oil we would be bust”? Mr Straw: I think they do. That was the central theme of the report of the Arab intellectuals a couple of years, the seminal report by the United Nations Development Programme. Q131 Mr Maples: The Development Programme recognised that, but did the governments— Mr Straw: They are increasingly recognising this. The figures are startling. For example, Hewlett Packard obtains more patents every two weeks than have been issued in respect of Arab countries over a 20-year period. The intellectual impoverishment of this region is terrible, and increasingly Arab leaders are recognising that. I read a book over the summer, The World is Flat, by Tom Friedman, which spells out as a very useful synopsis of the challenge aVecting the Arab region. Mr Maples is absolutely right to say that the countries in the Arab world were at least on a level with Malaysia, China and South Korea, if not doing rather better than them fifty years ago in terms of overall living standards. They are now way behind, and it is a really serious issue for them. However, there are signs of improvement. There was the joint conference on Saudi reform, which I chaired with His Royal Highness Prince Saud Al-Faisal in February. If you had said to me even a year ago that there was going to be this kind of joint conference, one would have been very sceptical; but it indicates an increasing commitment by the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia to its reform programme—that is a similar but diVerent commitment by the government of Egypt. Chairman, can I crave the indulgence of the Committee? I had understood this session would last an hour or an hour and a half, and I think others thought it would last two hours; and if it would finish in seven or eight minutes, that is closer to two hours than an hour and a half. Q132 Chairman: I think we will do that. We will see if we can get there. Can I ask about the Israeli/Palestinian conflict. You talked about impoverishment of people and lack of political progress. What is your assessment of the impact of 3240461003 Page Type [E] 27-06-06 00:33:14 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Ev 34 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence 24 October 2005 Mr Jack Straw MP, Mr David Richmond CMG and Dr Peter Gooderham the Israeli withdrawal from Gaza on the possibilities of political process going further; and do you think that will have any impact on terrorism in the region? Mr Straw: We welcomed, and I welcomed, the Israeli withdrawal from Gaza. If your aim is a separate state for Palestine, you have to start somewhere, and you have to start, in my judgment, with the Israeli withdrawal from Gaza. It is therefore a necessary—I am not saying suYcient— precondition for the establishment of that state. It is also a test for the Palestinian authority whether it has the capacity and the will to build up what would be an embryonic mini state. A great deal of eVort is going in to support them in terms of security reform, and, through Jim Wolfensohn, a process of reconstruction; so it is a good step rather than the reverse. On the issue of terrorism, the quicker the Israeli/Palestinian conflict is resolved by political processes the quicker we can see an end to the terrorism that has so shattered lives on both sides of the green line. Q133 Chairman: Do you see a role for either the UK, the EU or some other international body in facilitating the ongoing process? Mr Straw: Are you talking about security forces? Q134 Chairman: Either as security forces or facilitating the negotiation process, given that the Israelis seem to be saying that there are not going to be any more dramatic unilateral steps, and that the Palestinians have got the election, and the Israelis have got a political power struggle within Likud. Can we and others internationally do something now to keep the process going? Mr Straw: We are doing, but I think it is important that we should not reinvent these structures. We have got the Quartet arrangement now and it is working. There was a good meeting in late September in New York, which I attended, and we just need to keep that going. There was a very, very positive commitment all round the table, from the UN, from the Russian Federation from the US and the EU to this process and to the conclusions we came up with. In terms of whether there is a contribution that we can make, there are many contributions that we can make, and we are making them in many respects, including continuing support and advice to the Palestinian authority for security sector reform. We would also be willing to consider any requests that came in for other assistance. Q135 Mr Hamilton: Foreign Secretary, there is no doubt that the security barrier or wall, whatever you would call it, has helped the Israelis keep out some atrocities that might have happened had they not had it. The big problem is where it goes. We have had the Israeli High Court making judgments that the route of the wall, or plan for the wall, or barrier, has been entirely wrong, cutting oV Palestinians from their own farmland. What can we do to ensure that if they continue to build this barrier they do not further create resentment amongst Palestinians and exacerbate some of the terrorist acts that are taking place? Mr Straw: If they did indeed build the wall away from the green line— Q136 Mr Hamilton: I am thinking about the way they are encircling East Jerusalem, for example. Mr Straw: Indeed. This will exacerbate tensions. However, there is a prior question here, which is the building of settlements, because the wall is not being routed in the abstract, it is being routed around settlements; and the great concern of us and of many others is the creation by the Israelis of facts on the ground. It is for that and for many other reasons that we feel so strongly against any further development in the E1 sector, which would lead to the complete encirclement of East Jerusalem. Even so, on current plans, access between East Jerusalem and Ramallah and the south will become more diYcult, which is certainly of very great concern. What do we do? We keep up the pressure and keep talking to international partners, particularly the Americans, as I have done pretty continuously, and to the Israelis. Chairman: Andrew Mackinlay has indicated that he wants to come in. Can you be extremely brief? Q137 Andrew Mackinlay: I can, but this problem of timing has happened before—but I will move straight to my point. In the Former Soviet Union there are decaying lighthouses for example around the coast where there is material that can be taken by people who want to develop— Mr Straw: Like light bulbs? Q138 Andrew Mackinlay: No, and I am surprised you are quite flippant about that because there is material which could go into dirty bombs and there is clearly evidence about that. I am surprised you take that view, Foreign Secretary because—I am responding. There have also been reports that the market place for that is in the “Stans”. Certainly there was quite a detailed and authoritative piece on the BBC PM Programme by Rob Broomby about this. It relates to what this Committee has drawn attention to in the past about the access to these materials throughout the Former Soviet Union—by way of example, lighthouses in remote places, which are looted—and also the fact that we are concerned about the “Stans” and we have not got representation for instance in Kyrgyzstan, where there is also the problem of Islamic refugees from Uzbekistan. In a sense, because we are under time constraints there are some related things here. One is the decay and access of stuV around the Former Soviet Union; second is the market place and the “Stans”, and third is the absence of our representation in this very fragile country of Kyrgyzstan, which has this issue and the issue of the refugees from Uzbekistan. Mr Straw: Please put aside my flippant remark about light bulbs. We have done a great deal since the break-up of the Soviet Union to support the safe custody process, and so has the American Government. The programme has a name, which I have forgotten. We allocated a lot of money to this. 3240461003 Page Type [O] 27-06-06 00:33:14 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Ev 35 24 October 2005 Mr Jack Straw MP, Mr David Richmond CMG and Dr Peter Gooderham I am not aware of—I do not recall seeing anything recently in which serious concerns were being raised about the security of nuclear arsenals in this— Q139 Andrew Mackinlay: Foreign Secretary, I am surprised because you know how— Mr Straw: We can write to you.3 Q140 Andrew Mackinlay: There are sometimes authoritative articles in newspapers. Unusually, there was quite an authoritative item on a radio programme, which specifically dealt with the issues of the materials to which I have referred, the sources of them; and it specifically said about Kyrgyzstan, where we have not got representation. Mr Straw: We will write to you, and you can also have a note about representation in Kyrgyzstan. We are accredited there. Ev 37 Andrew Mackinlay: Yes, in Almaty, which is— Q141 Chairman: I apologise if there was confusion. We were definitely expecting a two-hour session, concluding with a seven o’clock vote; but, clearly, somehow or other wires got crossed. I am grateful for you coming along and enduring nearly two hours. We look forward to seeing you again in a few weeks’ time when you come and talk about the European Union Presidency. To give you notice, I will be writing on behalf of the Committee concerning the report we produced on Cyprus and the response we received from your Clerk because we want to pursue that issue further at some point. We will not ask questions now. Mr Straw: I have let you have a detailed response to that. Chairman: Can I thank you and your colleagues, Dr Gooderham and Mr Richmond, for coming along. 3240461004 Page Type [E] 27-06-06 00:33:14 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Ev 36 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Supplementary evidence submitted by the Secretary of State for Foreign & Commonwealth AVairs I agreed to provide a detailed response to three questions raised by the Committee during my appearance before it on 24 October 2005 as follows; — the security situation in Basra (Younger-Ross, q 78) — extraordinary rendition (Illsey, q 110) — controls of radiological material in the Former Soviet Union (Mackinlay, q 137 and 138) My responses to these questions are set out below. Security Situation in Basra Q78 Richard Younger-Ross: Pursuing the point on Basra, I had the privilege to visit there just after the fighting finished and saw what an excellent task our Forces were doing. I have to say that they were clearly not fully prepared for the task in front of them, because the Government had clearly not thought about the fact that it needed extra DfID help and advisors in relation to police and other areas. However, the Forces did a magnificent job in dealing with the local tribal issues and working with the local community. There has clearly been a deterioration in the relationships between our Forces there and the local authorities. What is being done to build those bridges? During my visit to Basra, on 11 November, I was able to meet the Deputy Governor and to see first hand that relations with the local authorities have improved since the events of 19 September. The joint UK/Iraq statement of 11 October, expressing regret that the incident took place and for the casualties on both sides and damage to public facilities, forms part of the wider eVorts to restore good working relations with the Iraqi authorities in Basra. Present at my meetings in order to continue support for the Iraqi political process in Basra—were senior members of Basra Provincial Council, and a cross-section of local civil society (including Shi’i and Sunni tribal leaders). All my interlocutors emphasised the need for greater consultation with the UK presence in Basra. During my visit, I called on the Basra Provincial Council to condemn those groups mounting attacks on MND(SE) and to ensure local security forces took eVective action against them. This will help remove the major obstacle to an acceleration of reconstruction and the strengthening of co-operation. In Southern Iraq more widely the Department for International Development (DfID) has committed £131 million for infrastructure rehabilitation, of which £53 million has been spent on employment creation and improving local administration, along with a £40 million project for improved power and water supplies in southern Iraq. The power and water project will also help central government design an eVective longterm infrastructure strategy. A Governance Development Fund provides project funding for work enabling Iraqi capacity building to take place. We also co-chair, with the United Nations, the Southern Iraq Donor Group, which aims to bring all the major civilian and military agencies together to better co-ordinate and deliver our response to reconstruction and development in Southern Iraq. Our staV—at the British Consulate General in Basra—have been hard at work ensuring greater Council involvement in reconstruction projects, security issues, and assistance for education and culture in Basra. We are, therefore, now currently on much better terms with the Governor and Council, and co-operation in all areas is proceeding as well as expected given the continuing fragile security situation. Our Consul General, James Tansley, now addresses weekly meetings of the Council and regularly discusses security issues with the Governor. We aim to continue this engagement to ensure that the legacy of our presence in Basra will create further renewal of the region. Extraordinary Rendition Q110 Mr Illsley: Foreign Secretary, the letter which you supplied to the Committee in March which gave the conclusion that the British Government is not aware of the use of its territory or air space for the purpose of extraordinary rendition was taken at face value by most members of the Committee at that time, before the election. We took that to mean that we were not aware of any extraordinary rendition, and that it was not happening. The press reports were therefore something of a surprise. Would our Government be contacted by any country using our airspace, taking suspects to other countries? Would we be asked for permission or would there be any circumstances where we would be contacted; or is it the case that it could well be happening but that our Government is not aware of it simply because we have not been informed, or our permission is not necessary? OYcial permission (ie Diplomatic clearance) is not needed for non-scheduled, non-commercial civil aircraft, including VIP flights over-flying or landing at civilian airports in the UK. In such cases the flight operator simply files the aircraft flight plan to the central Integrated Flight Plans Systems (IFPS). In the case of military or State aircraft landing at military airfields, clearance is sought from the MoD. Certain countries have a block clearance on a yearly renewable basis in a quid pro quo agreement (US, Germany, Italy and many others). Otherwise all nations must formally request permission to land or transit. However, neither international nor national aviation regulations require the provision of passenger information when transiting UK territory or airspace. 3240461004 Page Type [O] 27-06-06 00:33:14 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Ev 37 Controls of Radiological Material in the Former Soviet Union Q137 Andrew Mackinlay: I can, but this problem of timing has happened before—but I will move straight to my point. In the Former Soviet Union there are decaying lighthouses for example around the coast where there is material that can be taken by people . . . which could go into dirty bombs . . . There have also been reports that the market place for that is in the “Stans”. Certainly there was quite a detailed and authoritative piece on the BBC PM Programme by Rob Broomby about this. It relates to what this Committee has drawn attention to in the past about the access to these materials throughout the Former Soviet Union—by way of example, lighthouses in remote places, which are looted—and also the fact that we are concerned about the “Stans” and we have not got representations for instance in Kyrgyzstan, where there is also the problem of Islamic refugees from Uzbekistan. In a sense, because we are under time constraints there are some related things here. One is the decay and access of stuV around the Former Soviet Union; second is the market place and the “Stans”, and third is the absence of our representation in this very fragile country of Kyrgyzstan, which has this issue and the issue of the refugees from Uzbekistan. The Global Partnership against the spread of weapons and materials of mass destruction was inaugurated at the G8 Kananaskis Summit in 2002. Under the Global Partnership, G8 leaders pledged to provide up to $20 billion over ten years to projects, initially in Russia, to support non-proliferation, disarmament, counter-terrorism and nuclear safety. The UK has agreed to contribute up to $750 million over 10 years, with 80% of the current £36.5 million annual budget being spent on projects in the Russian Federation. Practical progress has been made in implementing commitments under the Global Partnership, including the physical protection of nuclear materials and facilities. The G8 Gleneagles Statement and the Sea Island G8 Action Plan on Non-Proliferation, highlighted the importance of addressing the security of nuclear materials, equipment and technology as well as radioactive sources. A number of countries have now established programmes with Russia and Ukraine to upgrade the physical protection of and account for nuclear materials. These include the US, UK, Germany, Canada, Norway, Sweden and the EU. One aspect of this work has been securing radiological sources such as those you mentioned. Several donors to the Global Partnership, including the US, Norway, Denmark, the Nordic Environmental Finance Corporation (NEFCO), Germany, Canada and France are supporting dismantling, storing and replacing some 700 highly radioactive Radioisotope Thermoelectric Generators (RTGs) which have been used to power Russian lighthouses. A Russian “RTG Master Plan” is being developed and eVorts are under way to increase co-ordination among participating countries. Rt Hon Jack Straw MP, Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth AVairs 22 November 2005 3249491001 Page Type [SE] 27-06-06 00:34:13 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Ev 38 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Wednesday 2 November 2005 Members present: Mike Gapes, in the Chair Mr John Horam Mr Eric Illsley Mr Paul Keetch Mr Andrew Mackay Andrew Mackinlay Mr John Maples Sandra Osborne Mr Greg Pope Mr Ken Purchase Sir John Stanley Ms Gisela Stuart Witness: Mr Frank Gardner, OBE, Security Correspondent, BBC, examined. Q142 Chairman: Good afternoon. Welcome to this session of the Select Committee. We are delighted, Mr Gardner, that you have been able to join us today to give us your expertise and knowledge. Can I begin by asking you a general question because you have been closely following the issue of terrorism for some time. We had evidence given to this Committee a few weeks ago from Professor Paul Wilkinson and Mr Peter Taylor about changes in the nature of the terrorist threat that we confront. I would be interested to know your perspective on the current position with regard to developments and changes over recent years, since 9/11, and the kind of threats that we face. Mr Gardner: How many days have you got? It is a very valid question. The major change of course to the al Qaeda threat came in the wake of 9/11. Osama bin Laden and his followers knew that there would be retribution for 9/11 even if it was not able to be pinned on them, so their logistical basis became scattered, and it became a much harder target for counter-terrorism forces to engage. The threat, as I see it, to western Europe and Western interests internationally is just as real as it was three years ago. I remember being accused by some commentator in a newspaper of being the BBC’s “insecurity” correspondent because I said, “The threat is real and this is not just governments trying to stir up support; it had nothing to do with Iraq; the threat has been there for a very long time.” I am going to stick my neck out here and say that certainly for the foreseeable future the threat of terrorism to the West has been raised dramatically by events in Iraq. That is my personal view, not necessarily a BBC view. You have just got to look at the statistics. I think that a mistake which our friends across the water in Washington make is to think of terrorism or the al Qaeda phenomenon as a supplydriven phenomenon: it is not; it is demand-driven. The idea that, “oh, it is great to have a conflict in Iraq because you draw out all the bad forces, and we can then engage them and eliminate them there”, which is how I have heard one American oYcial putting it, is absolute nonsense. Iraq has breathed new life into the al Qaeda phenomenon. The old al Qaeda is no longer; it is very much scattered and diVused. They are hiding out in Pakistan and Afghanistan, and there is not much left of the original network. However the idea that Bin Laden and Zawahiri generated that wake-up call to Muslims, saying, “you have got to wake up and defend your lands, our lands, from invasion” is an idea that is very much alive and kicking, and has been regenerated by what has happened in Iraq. Q143 Chairman: How strong is al Qaeda and its associated network in Saudi Arabia, and how reliable is Saudi Arabia as a partner for us in combating it? Mr Gardner: The al Qaeda phenomenon in Saudi Arabia is relatively new. It only put its head above the parapet, as it were, in May 2003, when they carried out a triple suicide bombing on Western housing compounds in Riyadh. It took them several months to plan that. The organisation that did it calls itself the al Qaeda organisation in the Arabian Peninsula. It is relatively small. They have very grand ideas. They have an online magazine, Al-Batar, where they have issued advice and instructions to their followers on how to ambush princes and kidnap people. They are a small but extremely bloodthirsty organisation. They are heavily depleted; they have taken huge losses in the last couple of years, particularly in the last 10 months. Their leadership is very fragmented. A lot of the main leaders have been killed in the last two years; for the record, men like Abdul Aziz al-Muqrin, Salah Al-Oufi, Yousef Al-Ayeeri and Turki Nasser Al-Dandani. All these men have been killed in the last two years, so a lot of the brains at the top of this organisation are no longer there. However, there are still recruits coming into it. To a limited degree there is a kind of wellspring of anger, be it directed against the Americans because of what is going on in Iraq, or be it directed against the Al-Saud in some cases. The numbers are hard to put a figure on. There is no shortage of weapons. In Saudi Arabia it is very easy for insurgents to get hold of weapons across the border from Yemen, or from Iraq. But the Saudi authorities have had great success in trying to combat this. They have run a very eVective hearts-and-minds operation, as well as physically combating terrorism through building up their counter-terrorist forces. How reliable a partner is Saudi Arabia? At the moment it is reliable. The co-operation between Saudi Arabia, Britain and the US is intense in the CT field in Saudi Arabia. It has not always been that way, and remember that this is often quite diYcult for the Saudis to manage because there will be people at middle and low level who 3249491001 Page Type [O] 27-06-06 00:34:13 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Ev 39 2 November 2005 Mr Frank Gardner, OBE cannot stand the Americans and who do not think that we are much better because we are, in their eyes, crusading, occupying forces, who have gone in to try and re-colonise Iraq. That can potentially lead to divided loyalties. So far, to my knowledge, there have not been any cases of anybody infiltrating high up on the inside of the security forces and betraying people. Q144 Sir John Stanley: Mr Gardner, would we be right to conclude from what you have said that the government’s counter-terrorist forces are winning against terrorism in Saudi Arabia; or would that be a misconstruction of what you said? Mr Gardner: I think that would be accurate. There will be more attacks. Everybody I have spoken to— and I have followed this subject professionally anyhow because I am still the BBC’s security correspondent, but also from personal interest—and the inquest into the attack on us is still going on and will draw to a conclusion fairly shortly, so I have followed this fairly closely—thinks that there will be more attacks. However, the ability of al Qaeda’s adherents in Saudi Arabia to launch big spectacular raids, such as they did in Al Khobar in June last year, is probably limited. Remember that even though they were able to strike in Eastern Province, where the oil facilities are concentrated, they have not so far dealt any kind of a blow to the oil industry per se. They have also failed to assassinate any members of the Al Saud ruling family. They will probably have a go. Amidst all of this good news—you are probably going to ask me about this, but I should say straight away that there is a very ominous dark cloud on the horizon, and that is what the CIA refer to as “bleedback”, the return of militants who have gone to fight in Iraq who have come back to Saudi Arabia; and there is an organisation for this, a pipeline to bring them back. The latest estimate I saw for the number of Saudi Mujahideen, as they call themselves, who have gone to fight the coalition and the Iraqi Government in Iraq, is about 350. I suspect that that is probably an underestimate and that the numbers are probably bigger than that. Obviously, some of these people do not come back. They think they are going to Paradise, and blow themselves up. However, there are those who are coming back, and there are indications that a recent shoot-out in Dammam in Eastern Province involved some Saudi militants who had come back from Iraq. Remember that these are people who are going to come back utterly brutalised, with all sense of humanity, as we would know it, dissipated. These are people who have watched beheadings first-hand, and possibly have even done them themselves. The normal restraints of human behaviour and decency that you get in the vast majority of Saudi society—and I want to put in a plug for Saudi Arabia because it gets a bad press, but most Saudis are very decent, honest, kind and charitable people, and they are not by nature violent people. We are only talking here about a tiny minority, but they are a dangerous minority, and they are starting to filter back. It is something that the Saudi, British and American Governments are very concerned about. Q145 Sir John Stanley: Would you say that the political objective of the terrorists in Saudi Arabia is still to remove the ruling family, and does that objective any longer have any credibility in their organisation, given the lack of success so far, as they would see it? Mr Gardner: They have a number of objectives. They seem to slightly move the goalposts. Originally, when Osama bin Laden was setting up in Afghanistan, his big beef was with the presence of US uniformed forces in Saudi Arabia, in the Land of the Two Holy Mosques. He objected to the presence of 5,000 US Airforce men and women at Prince Sultan Air Base; and they were there from 1990 right the way through to late 2003. They have gone, so that particular aim is no longer there. There are those who support al Qaeda in Saudi Arabia, who consider that their entire peninsula needs to be cleansed of non-believers, of “KuVar”, as they call them. I think that that was certainly the aim of the people who attacked us. Here was a chance to have a pop at some Westerners, scare others into leaving the country, and embarrass the Saudi Government. Ultimately they want to turn the Saudi Kingdom into something that is much more approaching a theocratic Islamist state. They do want to get rid of the Al Sauds. They have diVerent reasons for this. In some cases, it is economic frustration; in some cases it is political frustration. As Prince Turki once joked, “We have a very democratic system in Saudi Arabia; all political parties are banned; we treat them equally.” That is still the case, although as Dr Mai Yamani will tell you afterwards, there are signs of movement on the political and democratisation front. Q146 Sir John Stanley: Would you say that the nexus, such as it exists, between al Qaeda-leaning terrorists and Saudi Arabia and Osama bin Laden and what remains of his group, is stronger with those of Saudi Arabia than elsewhere, or are they now as detached as all the other very detached al Qaeda-leaning organisations in 60 odd countries where they are operating? Is it just the same in Saudi Arabia, and the degree of detachment there? Mr Gardner: The nexus is weaker than it was. There was an intercept by Western intelligence collectively. I do not know whether it was the NSA or GCHQ, but there was an intercept in January 2003—this is public knowledge—of a communication from the hills of Waziristan in Pakistan, where some of al Qaeda’s fugitive leadership were hiding out and still are, and their followers in Saudi Arabia. That communication said: “It is time to start the insurgency.” The Saudi would-be insurgents said, “Hang on, we are not ready yet; we are not organised yet; we can get the weapons, but we are not ready.” They said: “No, this is an order; you have got to start.” Four months later they drove three suicide truck bombs into the compounds in Riyadh and killed 35 people, so it began. Until that moment— and I am going back here to an earlier question—I do not think that the Saudi authorities had taken al Qaeda seriously. Only a few weeks before that, Prince Naif, the Interior Minister, had boasted and 3249491001 Page Type [E] 27-06-06 00:34:13 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Ev 40 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence 2 November 2005 Mr Frank Gardner, OBE said: “We do not have any al Qaeda sleeper cells here; if we did, we would have woken them up long ago.” There was an element of “head in the sand”; al Qaeda was somebody else’s problem. They disapproved of it, but this was not something which was going to happen in Saudi Arabia. It was a massive shock to everybody. The Saudi’s say, “This was our 9/11.” On the technical side, in terms of communication, there has been quite close co-operation between the Americans and the Saudis in terms of trying to trap the terrorists. I do not know if any of you have seen the film that I submitted to the Committee in advance, but if you look at it you will see that two years ago I managed to get access oYcially into their DNA labs in the counterterrorism centre they had in Riyadh. They had quite a sophisticated operation; they were able to do DNA-mapping. If, for example, they know that a certain terror suspect spent the night in this house in Riyadh, and they are able to raid it afterwards and take fibre analysis; then they know that three days later he moved to Jeddah, and this is where he passed through—they are able to plot where somebody has been. They are also able to track and trap people through the use of mobile phones. That has made it very diYcult for al Qaeda to communicate. They tend to communicate either by messages passed by hand or through the Internet. That is still the preferred means of communication. When I was Middle East Correspondent I covered the story about how they were trying to control ordinary Saudis’ access to the Internet through a node, through a thing called the King Abdul Aziz Centre for Science and Technology. They have not been able to control it. People are able to circumvent controls, and al Qaeda is able to publish online various claims and biographies of heroes, as they see it; and that is their main means of communication. Q147 Mr Keetch: Mr Gardner, you said that Iraq had breathed new life into al Qaeda, and you mentioned the bleed-back. CSIS in Washington say that that bleed-back is in the early thousands, not just hundreds. Is there any sense that there is a bleedback also from insurgents being—not trained, but gaining combat experience in Iraq—not just going back to Saudi Arabia but also going into other parts of the world, maybe even back into Europe? Mr Gardner: Are you talking about Saudis coming out of Iraq? Q148 Mr Keetch: Saudis or others. Mr Gardner: This is a question which I have been very interested in myself. I have been asking a lot of people this. There is evidence that Europe-based jihadis have started to filter back from Iraq. We are talking here mainly about people of ethnic North African origin, usually Algerians but also some Moroccans and Tunisians, who were based in Europe, often with European Community passports but who had gone down the pipeline—and there has been quite an eYcient pipeline to channel people from European countries, usually through Syria, and then feed them into the insurgency, whether through al-Qaem in the north-west of Iraq, or other parts. I am not seeing Saudis doing that, other than coming back to Saudi Arabia itself. There is no evidence that I have seen that there are large numbers doing this. The Saudi authorities, who have become much more organised in the last two years in counter-terrorism, were quite surprised and shocked to find that at a big shoot-out they had at a place called al-Ras in April this year, they found that they had killed in the shoot-out somebody called Abdul Karim Majati, who was a Moroccan. They did not even know he was in the country. He was instrumental in the Casablanca bombings of May 2003 in Morocco, and is thought to quite possibly have had a hand in the Madrid bombings, through connections to Moroccan extremists. They did not even know he was in the country, so he was hiding out in a safe house north of Riyadh. I have been there, and it is an area known as Qasim, and it is a bastion of support for radical Wahhabism—I think that is probably the right way to put it. It is a pretty hard-core part of Saudi Arabia, and it is making them wonder how many other international jihadis might have come back to Saudi Arabia and be hiding out there. It is interesting that on the latest list of 36 most wanted people that has been published in the Saudi Kingdom, that includes people who are not Saudis and include Sahalian North Africans, Chadians, and people like that. Q149 Mr Keetch: You have answered my second question. Although Saudis are not directly involved, there is a linkage and clear pipeline of communications between international al Qaeda people using Iraq, and also Saudi Arabia. There is a bleed-through both ways in a sense. Mr Gardner: Yes, but Saudi Arabia is not an ideal base for al Qaeda because even before May 2003 the Mubahith, the Saudi secret police, for want of a better word, were pretty eYcient at interrogating people and finding things out. Saudis have always resented the term “police state” but it is quite an authoritarian country, so it is not a natural base, whereas Iraq, in its present state, is a natural base for al Qaeda and very much the locus of al Qaeda has shifted from Afghanistan three or four years ago to Iraq now. It is suYciently chaotic in Iraq that al Qaeda cells are able to go there, train, undertake martyrdom operations, suicidal bombings, and make connections. Q150 Mr Keetch: We have been told in recent weeks by your colleague Peter Taylor, for example, and by Paul Wilkinson from St Andrews, that the Iraq situation is being used as a recruiting ground, using videos on the Internet, to recruit people—we need to be careful what we say about them in the UK—here and throughout Europe. Again, you have seen evidence of that and you would agree with that. Mr Gardner: Yes. In fact Peter Taylor’s film made it very clear. I know why we have to be careful about it, but the idea of using jihadi videos for recruitment dates back to Algeria in the early nineties, when this first started to be done. The GSPC and the GIA, the two main insurgency organisations in Algeria in the nineties, would film some of their ambushes and 3249491001 Page Type [O] 27-06-06 00:34:13 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Ev 41 2 November 2005 Mr Frank Gardner, OBE attacks on Algerian conscripts, on Algerian Army convoys, and they were horrific. They would take the camera—it would be very shaky—and film themselves slitting people’s throats. I have personally seen films from Chechnya that have been circulating underground in Birmingham, that have been very well-produced technically. Al Qaeda is becoming increasingly sophisticated in its use of the Internet and technology for recruiting and for propaganda. These types of videos have been around for quite a while. Certainly they are being put on to the Net extremely quickly in Iraq. The standard thing is that out of vision you hear voices in Arabic saying, “here we go, here we go; just wait, just wait”, and you will see in the distance a Humvee usually, a US convoy, approaching a bridge, and then “bang” goes the improvised explosive device, and they all shout “Allahu Akbar”—“God is the greatest” and then there is a big flash, and up it goes. This sort of thing is very successful in recruiting people to take part in the insurgency in Iraq, although in relatively small numbers still. The big diVerence now between Iraq and Afghanistan is that there were al Qaeda camps all over Afghanistan in the late nineties, and it is estimated that somewhere around 15,000 recruits pass through these camps. Hundreds went from Britain, but it was relatively harmless. They went there and got to fire a few rounds of Kalashnikov and maybe and RPG; they attended a few sermons and made a lot of contacts and connections, and then they came back. In most cases, people did nothing with it. Some people, like Hambali, went on to then become the main link between al Qaeda and Jemaah Islamiah in southeast Asia; but most people did not do anything with their experience: they grew up, passed into their thirties, got married, settled down and had jobs. Iraq is a very diVerent situation. This is not a training camp; this is a real war, and anybody who does go to Iraq should realise that they are quite possibly not going to come back. Q151 Mr Horam: You stressed how strong the Saudi reaction had been to their own problem in 2003 and how eVective their counter-terrorism measures had been. Is this because they have been able to deploy all the powers of a strongly authoritarian state—you said a police state? Second, do you think they are now on top and going to stay on top of it? Mr Gardner: The Saudis have been successful so far in their counter-terrorism eVorts because they have employed a number of methods. They have not just used physical force. When I went there soon after the May 2003 bombings, they were starting a programme of moderating some of the more outspoken imams. They needed to change the mindset of a lot of people. One of the problems in Saudi Arabia is that the education system has been very much geared towards bringing up young Saudi children to thinking that all non-Muslims are bad people. That has changed, or is changing, and they have gone to some eVorts to do that. They have also removed a lot of the most anti-Western preachers, imams. Q152 Mr Horam: How has this gone down with the Wahhabi leaders? Mr Gardner: Not too bad. The more extreme ones would see it as co-operating or doing the bidding of the Americans, which is not popular. Generally, the Saudi population is very anti-terrorism, and the Saudi authorities have been able to reach out to them. They have employed some quite controversial methods. They have talked to the families of militants, and in some cases pulled the families in for questioning, and said: “You put pressure on young Abdullah; bring him back in and talk to him.” You could see that as a subtle way of applying pressure or as essentially holding the family to ransom, in a way. Q153 Mr Horam: They are pretty ruthless about killing some people too. Mr Gardner: They have not taken that many prisoners, it has to be said. In fact, the man who is in charge of the counter-terrorism eVort in Saudi Arabia is Prince Muhammed bin Naif, one of the sons of the Interior Minister. He is very highly rated by both Saudis and Western diplomats. He views it that physical measures are less than half the battle. They have got to win over the hearts and minds. In a way, the insurgents have scored quite a lot of own goals. I do not know if you remember in 2003 the triple bombings in Riyadh in May, but then in November al Qaeda went and hit what was called the Muhaya complex and they killed a lot of Arabs, mainly non-Saudi Arabs, but Lebanese and Syrians. These were expatriate Arabs, living and working in Saudi Arabia. That cost them a lot; it was a complete blunder. In April 2004 they hit a police headquarters, blew it up and killed five people. A lot of Saudi policemen are dying at the hands of these insurgents, and these people have got brothers and families, and the tentacles from those spread deep into Saudi society. This is not something that Saudis approve of at all. Q154 Mr Horam: What is al Qaeda’s reaction to this? They seem to be losing the battle. Mr Gardner: They are. I think what we will see is a switching of targets. Who knows! They could try to aim for more senior figures in the al-Saud ruling family. They could try to concentrate entirely on Westerners. Q155 Mr Horam: What about oil? Is that a target? Mr Gardner: I have been several times to the oil facilities and they are very well guarded. They would need a light aircraft or something like that, and even then they have got anti-aircraft defences. Last year, to get to Ras Tanura, which is the main loading terminal for Saudi’s oil exports to bring them out to the Gulf, I had to pass through six checkpoints, where we were checked very thoroughly. However, where there is a will, there is a way, and it is always possible. One thing we should be careful of is that there may well be more attacks in the oil-producing area of Saudi around Al-Khobar. That does not mean to say that they have hit the oil industry. When they raided the Oasis compound in Al-Khobar in May last year and killed Michael Hamilton of 3249491001 Page Type [E] 27-06-06 00:34:13 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Ev 42 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence 2 November 2005 Mr Frank Gardner, OBE Apicorp in Dhahran, that was not a direct attack on the oil industry per se. The oil industry is very spread out and they would have to do a lot of co-ordinated simultaneous attacks and have to have a lot of help on the inside for it to be eVective. Q156 Mr Horam: Turning to Saudi funding of terrorism, Professor Wilkinson said to us that there is more to be done in suppressing the financial assistance that comes from wealthy Saudi supporters of al Qaeda. Would you agree with him? Mr Gardner: Yes, I would agree with that. Saudis are generally very generous people—they have not been generous enough to pay any compensation to me yet, but maybe it will come. The way it often works is that somebody will literally sign pretty much a blank cheque for what he thinks is a charitable cause—an orphanage in Bosnia, a madrassa in Pakistan, a blind charity somewhere—and the problem has been that in giving this charity Saudis have not been nearly strict enough with themselves in asking questions as to where it is going. A lot of the funds that people thought were going to genuine charitable causes were ending up in the hands of al Qaeda—in Afghanistan in the past. There are also signs that people, not just in Saudi Arabia but in other Gulf States have even unwittingly funded al Qaeda people in positions of authority. Q157 Mr Horam: What is the government doing about that? Mr Gardner: One of the measures they have done is to try and control things through SAMA, the Saudi Arabian Monetary Agency, which is the equivalent of a central bank. I am fairly certain that any foreign donations above a certain size have to be approved by the foreign ministry inside Arabia. The trouble is that you cannot control it completely, and terrorism is cheap—9/11 cost half a million dollars; Madrid cost $50,000. This is nothing; it is peanuts; this is pocket money to some of the people who come to Bayswater in the summer. This is not a lot of money. Personally, I think that the financial war against terrorism is a bit of a red herring. I have attended one of the plenary sessions of the Financial Action Task Force, which is a 33-nation task force that meets all over the world and has these sessions in trying to choke oV funding, and in terms of combating al Qaeda’s funding straight after 9/11 they were initially quite successful. They seized about US$125 million in the first few weeks; and then two years later it was still only up to US$133 million— talking globally—and this is tiny money really. I personally do not spend a lot of time worrying about the financial side of it because it will always be relatively easy for them to get hold of funds to do conventional style attacks. Nuclear or weapons of mass destruction are diVerent and would take a lot more money. The media estimates of Osama bin Laden’s own wealth, I should say, were vastly overstated. Many people said he had $300 million, but it is closer to 30. Q158 Chairman: Can I ask you about the relationships between Wahhabism within the Saudi regime and the al Qaeda element of Wahhabism? You mentioned Wahhabism as an element, but could you clarify? Is it Wahhabism per se that is the problem, or is it a perverted form of Wahhabism or particular strand of Wahhabism? Mr Gardner: This is certainly one I recommend you ask Dr Mai Yamani, who probably knows more about it than I do. Wahhabism comes from a marriage of convenience, as it were, in the eighteenth century between a Saudi cleric, Mohammed Abdel Wahhab and the al-Saud family. That alliance has survived into this century. Wahhabism, as I am sure you know, is a very ascetic, rather puritan view of Islam. A lot of the adherents of Wahhabism bitterly opposed the introduction of television in Saudi Arabia, and King Faisal in the sixties had a lot of diYculty in persuading and bringing people around to this idea that women should be educated as well. You can see that there was a natural alliance there with the Taliban, and there were close links between Saudi Arabia and the Taliban until relatively recently. Not all Saudis follow Wahhabism, but the area of Saudi Arabia where you get the most concentration of very devout, very fundamentalist adherents of Wahhabism, tends to be Qasim Province, north-west of Riyadh, places like Buraidah for example. These are people who dress as people dressed at the time of the Prophet Mohammed, fourteen centuries ago. They wear slightly shorter clothes. They do not wear the black camel rope “agaal” which goes round there because they pray so often they often have a brown “zabib”, what the Egyptians rather irreverently call “a raisin”—the brown spot here, from touching their head to the floor in prayer so often. They have wispy, unkempt beards. These people, but not all by any means, are often quite isolated in the sense that they do not have a lot of contact with Westerners, and they tend to believe that by default most Westerners are bad news. That is not all Wahhabis. I do recommend that you ask Dr Mai Yamani about that as well. Q159 Ms Stuart: We are getting a pretty clear picture as to what the problem is, but I am trying to grapple with where the solutions are, given the history. You said that there was a recognition particularly within Saudi Arabia that this is as much a battle of hearts as it is a physical battle. Is there something more which we could do, that is the liberal democracies of the West telling their story, because I get a sense that there is no dialogue here; that there is only one story. What would your view be therefore on the World Service proposed introduction of an Arabic television channel? Would that be helpful not as a propaganda tool but simply in terms of having a dialogue and an alternative story? The second thing is that when we went to Morocco we thought the use of liberal imams to be a positive development. They tell their own alternative story. How successful do you think that might be in Saudi Arabia? 3249491001 Page Type [O] 27-06-06 00:34:13 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Ev 43 2 November 2005 Mr Frank Gardner, OBE Mr Gardner: To some extent they are doing this already. There are a number of projects underway in Saudi Arabia to try and take the sting out of jihadism to try and make people less suspicious and distrustful of Westerners. I have to say that the state itself has a lot to answer for here, having fostered and allowed an education system for decades that bred this hatred of non-believers, as they call it, particularly of Jews. I have been to every Arab country and have spent much of the last 25 years in the Arab and Islamic world, and it is really only in Saudi Arabia that I have encountered this xenophobia. I have met very devout Egyptians, for example, who have said: “You are a Westerner; you are at this party; if you want a beer, that is not a problem.” One thing that the Yemenis that have done, which the Saudis are also doing, is to use scholars, experts, people who know the Islamic scriptures inside out, to try and persuade deviants, as they put it—militants—to renounce violence and to turn their back on it and of course to betray some of the people in their organisation. This has had some success. I went down to Yemen just under two years ago and interviewed somebody called Judge Hamoud Al-Hattar, who the Foreign OYce invited over here—so you have probably met him. He introduced me to some of the people who he had recently got to repent and turn their backs on violence in prison. I have no means of knowing if they were genuine or not. They had had to sign certain pledges. They certainly did not like me very much, as a Westerner and a journalist; they were not exactly saying, “now I am repented I am fine with you being in the room”! They were still pretty hostile to the West. It is a result of Western policies. I have said this many times, that Arabs have grown quite cynical over the last hundred years because, to be perfectly honest, we, the West, had messed around in their part of the world for a long time. The big mistake which the US administration makes—and I have often heard President Bush say this—is to say, “they don’t like us because they don’t like our way of life”. That is absolute nonsense. Al Qaeda could not give a stuV what Americans do in America; they really could not care less. What they object to is Western military ventures in their heartland, as they put in, whether it be Afghanistan, Iraq or whatever. It is a slightly flawed argument because the Taliban would not hand over bin Laden, and so therefore there was an invasion, but on 11 February 2003, al Jazeera broadcast an audio statement by Osama bin Laden, in which he appealed to all Muslims all over the world, saying: “Wake up. You have got to come and defend the Holy Land of Mesopotamia, seat of the former Abbassid caliphate. It really does not matter if those usurpers, ie, the Baathists— survive or not. That is not the point. You have got to go and defend this land because these neo-crusaders and Zionists will simply go and occupy it, and then they will not leave.” You can dress it up any way you like, but the bottom line is that we are still there in Iraq, and that allows bin Laden’s supporters and sympathisers to say, “look, the Sheikh Abu Abdullah was right; he knew what he was talking about and his words have come true.” For most of the nineties bin Laden and Zawahiri’s ideology was way out on a limb, but a lot of things that they have been saying have proved to be correct. That has allowed al Qaeda to recruit more people. Unfortunately, Iraq is going to continue to be a problem there. Q160 Ms Stuart: Would you like to say what you think of the World Service’s decision to launch an Arabic television station, and whether that is helpful? Mr Gardner: I think they are going to have a job competing with the rather more glamorous channels that are out there—the satellite channels. It is a pity they could not have got this right 10 years ago, when they got into bed with Orbit, who then pulled the plug. If you remember, World Service Arabic television was a joint venture between the BBC and Orbit, which is owned by the King’s cousin in Saudi Arabia; so up popped Muhammed Al-Masari, slagging oV the Saudi Government; and the Saudi’s simply pulled the plug and said, “we are not funding this; we are not paying for somebody to slag us oV”—forgive the vernacular. In those intervening years, there was definitely a vacuum. The only television that Arabs could watch was the very turgid state television, which was dreadful. However, up popped Aljazeera, who said, “thanks very much; we will have all the journalists laid oV by the BBC”. A lot of people said, “Qatar—where?” Qatar has proved everybody wrong; it is a major force in international aVairs, Aljazeera. The joke in the Gulf is that Aljazeera is the capital of Qatar. It is a very powerful and influential satellite network, and others have tried to copy it—Abu Dhabi Television, Al Arabia. BBC Arabic Television has really got its work cut out for it; it is coming late to the party. It will be interesting to see if it works. What I would say, in a very clear answer to “what more should we be doing?”—the British Government needs to get more Arabic-speaking people, be they Muslim or Christian, on to the Arabic channels. You had a thing called the Islamic Media Unit; you had a very good spokesman—Gerald Russell, who spoke perfect Arabic—and then he was laid oV or moved, and it has more or less collapsed. While we are sitting here, there are people on air, live, criticising Britain and criticising Western policy; and there is hardly ever anybody to defend it. It needs to be somebody with good Arabic, who has spent time there, who understands the Middle East—and you need lots of these people. This is something that should have been done long ago, but I am astounded that, four years after 9/11, it has not been done. It is a real failure of government policy. You need to get more people out there, in their language, speaking in the way that they know. The Israelis are brilliant at it. Look at Netanyahu: on the first anniversary of 9/11 I was up on the rooftop above Ground Zero, and there was Netanyahu going from one channel to another, speaking the language that Americans like. He has got their dialect and vernacular. It was very easy for Americans to say, “I can understand what he is saying.” In many ways, the Arab world and the 3249491001 Page Type [E] 27-06-06 00:34:13 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Ev 44 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence 2 November 2005 Mr Frank Gardner, OBE rest are so far apart on this—they understand us much better than we understand them, so there needs to be more understanding there, I think. Q161 Mr Purchase: I want to touch on this Aljazeera phenomenon. As I understand it, it is the only programme that is widely believed in the Middle East and Gulf regions, and BBC and CNN are just not on the agenda any more. When you say that it will be interesting to see how the BBC copes with that, I think you could have found another form of words which would equally have been in the vernacular. Putting that to one side, you interestingly suggest that perhaps we should be trying to get Arabic speakers, with a message— however it is put across—into the Aljazeera networks, in order to make an impact on people who have come to believe that only Aljazeera can tell them the truth. But would Aljazeera be prepared to hear that message? Mr Gardner: I think so. They are quite broadminded. Even though, if you were to do a straw poll of every producer and correspondent in Aljazeera, they would all be very hostile or anti the invasion or occupation of Iraq, a lot of them, even before that, were relatively anti Western policy, because of the Israeli/Palestinian question. A lot of them are Palestinians. Remember that Aljazeera was one of the networks that were broadcasting those dreadful pictures of Mohammed Al-Dura, the 10-year old Palestinian boy who was shot in that crossfire in Gaza. To some extent, the news they are putting out is playing to the gallery, both in terms of the people who are putting it out and the people who are watching it; and ultimately it is events on the ground that will make a diVerence. The withdrawal from Gaza was something that meant a lot to people in the Arab world because they are so sick of promises and talking. I spent years covering all the negotiations at Sharm El-Sheikh over the Arab/Israeli peace thing, and there is a lot of talking but not a great deal of action. I am not pointing fingers of blame here, but I am just saying that Arabs are rather tired of hearing talking. Having said that, there is this vacuum with very few people to defend Western policy. Aljazeera does interview Israeli ministers. A lot of their audience think they should not, and complain. They say: “Why are you talking to the enemy?” But Aljazeera say, “No, we have got to do this. If we are going to air something from bin Laden, let us hear from the other side of the spectrum.” Q162 Mr Purchase: Do you feel suYciently strongly about that, that we ought to be making some kind of recommendation in our report about getting people on to Aljazeera? Mr Gardner: Not just Aljazeera, but you need to be making people available for the Arab media per se— not just Aljazeera but the print media, the online media, radio. There should not be just Frances Guy and her Islamic World Awareness thing in the Foreign OYce; there should be a room this big. Take the media seriously. I am not saying that because I am in the media; I am saying it because I have seen the eVect of it. A classic example is that I used to go down to these summits in Sharm El-Sheikh in 2000–01, and there would be King Abdullah there and Clinton and whoever—Arafat and all the various leaders—and the Israelis would bring with them a whole panel of people, all usually retired generals with perfect English. They would come to us and say, “we have General so-and-so here; would you like to have him available for interview?” In the media you often have very little time, particularly in broadcasting, and you are on air in 17 minutes— “great, we need a clip from this guy—quick, get somebody in”. Could we ever get the Palestinians? We would be lucky to doorstep somebody in his language, not in ours, as he got in and out of his limousine. They are still hopelessly disorganised in terms of media. It gave the Israeli delegations a great advantage in terms of getting their message across, and that in a way is what is happening with the West. We often interview Arabs who speak very good English, but there are very, very few English, British people who can speak good enough Arabic to be on these things; so you need to have people available to try and explain what government policy is. Q163 Sir John Stanley: Have you any firm evidence, as opposed to speculation, that has appeared in the press that the US has used Saudi Arabia as a place where torture under interrogation is carried out under the US extraordinary rendition procedures? Mr Gardner: No, I have seen no evidence of that, nor have I heard that. I have heard unconfirmed reports that that goes on in Egypt, Jordan and Syria, but not in Saudi Arabia. Q164 Sandra Osborne: Can you tell us something about the security situation in the United Arab Emirates and where that country fits into the international war against terrorism? Mr Gardner: Yes. We lived in the UAE from September 1997 to January 2000. Since we left nearly six years ago, Dubai has changed exponentially. Every time people think that it cannot build another skyscraper, you blink and it has built another 10. That place is changing very fast. Security has not been a big issue there. The internal security situation used to be an issue in the past, in that there was a bit of friction between the AlMakhtoums, the ruling family of Dubai, and the AlNahyans, the ruling family of Abu Dhabi; but they have long ago resolved any diVerences, and it is this federation of seven United Arab Emirates, what used to be the Trucial States under British protection. Dubai particularly is an international conduit for both good and bad things. It was long a centre for smuggling gold into India. It has often been used as a place for money-laundering, particularly by Russians who were coming out of the CIS states with just wads of cash, and buying up electronics and going back. Nobody ever asked where the money came from. I used to live in Bahrain as well, and Bahrain had a very tight financial system because they had close links with the Bank of England, so the monetary agency worked very closely and was very strict on moneylaundering. Dubai did not have those tight, stricter 3249491001 Page Type [O] 27-06-06 00:34:13 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Ev 45 2 November 2005 Mr Frank Gardner, OBE controls. When I used to be a banker, we were always rather wary of doing business in Dubai because we could not be sure of where the money came from. It is very much a home of Hawala transactions, which are paperless, record-less transactions, all done over the phone. I will explain how this works. I have a sum of money, and I go to you, a money dealer, in a back street in Dubai, and I say: “I want to send this money to my brother in Pakistan.” I hand you over the money, say $20,000, and he makes a phone call. At the other end of the phone is his mate, another money dealer, who hands over $20,000 to my brother in Pakistan. There are no auditable records of this; it is all done on trust. It is done very much on trust. It is an ancient system and it allows people to evade strict financial controls. There has been a lot of concern that this has helped terrorists to get funding. It is known for a fact that some of the funding for the 9/11 attacks did pass through a bank in Dubai, not through the Hawala system, but through an actual bank. It has surprised a lot of people that Dubai has not yet been hit by a terrorist attack, but Dubai is a huge melting pot. If al Qaeda hit Dubai, it would be an own goal. There is evidence that the UAE authorities have acted against al Qaeda-linked terrorism there. Somebody was arrested at Dubai Airport after a tip-oV by Western intelligence services. He was a North African and was brought back to France. It has not been a problem until now. I am quite certain that al Qaeda has supporters, possibly even operatives there, but there have been no signs so far that they have chosen to make any big attacks. It would be disastrous for everybody but also for the Makhtoums. A lot of the UAE ruling families are merchant families, who used to love going hunting in Afghanistan and Pakistan—falconing. They would take their birds with them and fly oV to Belushistan or to Afghanistan. Some of them even used to go hunting with Osama bin Laden in the 1990s, so there are links there, simply in terms of friendship links, rather than financial. Q165 Sandra Osborne: Are you aware of the government taking any measures to tighten up the financial situation? Mr Gardner: They have, but I have not studied them in detail. They have made some attempts. If you talk to the Foreign OYce you will find that there are a number of people in Customs and Excise who, every now and then, are stationed in the British Embassy in Dubai. It is the only country that I know of where Britain has two embassies. There is an embassy in Abu Dhabi and another actual embassy, not a consulate, in Dubai, so as not to upset the Makhtoums. That is how it works. Q166 Chairman: Given the geographical location of UAE between Saudi Arabia and Iran, and concerns about Wahhabism on one side and the Iranian Hezbollah link on the other side, from your perspective is there a threat of terrorism coming through from the Iranian side as well as the Saudi side? Mr Gardner: If there was, I do not think it would come through UAE; it would more likely come through Bahrain, which has a Shi’ite majority. Roughly 65% of Bahrainis are Shi’ites. There was a problem with Iran; Iran used to claim Bahrain as its own, and there was a big problem there in the nineties when about 33 policemen died altogether in a low-level insurgency there. The UAE is essentially non-political. I have never met any Emirati who is interested in politics: he wants his plot of land, his villa, his four-wheel drive, and his holidays twice a year to Orlando or Paris. They are not interested in politics there. Chairman: It sounds like a good life, if you can get it! Thank you very much, Mr Gardner, for coming along and answering our questions. We look forward to seeing you again at some future time. Witness: Dr Mai Yamani, Research Fellow of the Middle East Programme, Chatham House, examined. Chairman: Thank you for joining us, Dr Mai Yamani. Q167 Mr Maples: I wonder if you could talk to us a bit about Saudi reform and what is and is not happening or what might happen. We have seen some developments; there are very limited elections to municipal councils, but with no women being allowed to participate in those. Some I think hoped that when the old King died that we would see some changes. We have not yet. One keeps hearing that there is a younger generation in the Royal Family that understands what needs to be done. We all feel that those sorts of developments are likely to help Saudi Arabia to develop. On the other hand, the alternatives now, all over the Middle East, to the ruling despotic families or regimes seem to be religious extremists. One wonders whether, if there were free democratic elections in Saudi Arabia tomorrow, the people who would get elected would be the people Frank Gardner has just been talking about, the religious extremists. We have seen this vacuum in Iraq by religious extremism, and in Iran. What is happening, and what kind of reforms is it sensible to expect, or indeed for the West to promote or help on their way? Dr Yamani: The reforms that have taken place until now in Saudi Arabia are inadequate, too little for the demands of the people. They have had partial municipal elections that we saw in February to April, which were not inclusive. About one-quarter of the male population participated. Half the members were appointed, and the whole female population was excluded. To jump to the final part of your question, the results showed at the time that the Islamists had won. That was a victory tailormade to warn the West, especially the United States, that if we have elections, the Islamists will win. This is all over the Middle East. I think the fact that they 3249491001 Page Type [E] 27-06-06 00:34:13 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Ev 46 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence 2 November 2005 have excluded so many people, especially women and the liberal educated people—and many were in gaol at the time—they have concentrated on the neo Salafi, Wahhabi group, which I will explain later. They gave us those results. There were the partial municipal elections. Q168 Mr Maples: Are you saying it suited the Saudi Government to have this result? Dr Yamani: Originally, yes, because when Abdullah, Crown Prince at the time, now King Abdullah, arrived in May to visit President Bush, he said: “You see, we have had the elections. We had the Islamists, but we are controlling and managing the situation.” That was very good for the whole talk about reform and democracy in the Middle East. What we see now as a result of this particular attempt at reform, or partial elections, is that those who were supposed to have been appointed have not been named yet. Those who were elected have not met yet. There are very small details, such as the fact that they are going to have cinema twice a week for women and children—cartoons. There are small attempts so that perhaps woman will be able to vote in the future. I will talk about the economic reforms separately because that seems to be much easier, especially with the high price of oil. The second important part of reform has been the National Dialogue that King Abdullah has initiated. They saw that in Iraq and in the region in general, there is this whole idea of pluralism and a pluralist society, where you have to recognise diversity. So they had a national dialogue where they brought these diVerent people together, whether Wahhabi, Salafi, or those from the Hijaz, or the Shi’a—people who never talked to each other before; they had them in one room and they talked. That was a good step. But nothing has been legitimised subsequently by the religious establishment, so nothing really changed. The same goes for the consultative council, Majlis Ash-Shura. They increased the number of male members of the council from 120 to 150, but they cannot be elected; they cannot legislate; they cannot decide on the budget; they cannot even look at the expenses of the Princes. In Saudi Arabia they have made some limited, careful steps towards reform, but if you talk about competitive elections, freedom of expression, of assembly, of organisation, reforms of the educational system or the judiciary, they are more serious—and the policy of discrimination, on the basis of religious sect or tribe is still very much visible in the country. Q169 Mr Maples: Are we seeing any reforms at a slightly diVerent level, in institutions or government? Some people would argue that democratic voting is the last piece to put in place; that before that you need a transparent and incorrupt government, the rule of law, and institutions that have some kind of authority, whether universities or professional bodies. Are we seeing any of those kinds of developments? Dr Yamani: There are important economic reforms opening up investments—the Chamber of Commerce. This, as we all know, is a very good time Dr Mai Yamani for Saudi Arabia in terms of oil prices and revenues. We have seen the opening up of economics, and that is always much easier for them. What I have been looking at for the last few days in order to come and talk to you, and asking people in Saudi Arabia about the reforms, everyone said that King Abdullah has to look first at reform within the Royal Family, the largest royal family in the world; there are between 20–22,000 of them. He needs to look at, first, general house-cleaning. They have divisions. There are schisms, and the distribution of power among the younger generations and the power that has been concentrated on the branch of Al-Fahd, the brothers of the late King Fahd, known here also as the Suderi Seven. King Abdullah has been seen as the reformer who wanted to look especially to the West and internationally, as the champion of reform in Saudi Arabia. He is no longer the de facto ruler, but he is the King and for him the biggest challenge is to face the religious establishment, the Wahhabi religious establishment, and then the more conservative and powerful princes in the country; the distribution of jobs and the end of corruption within the Royal Family. That is an important first step, and then obviously freedom of assembly or organisations and civil society. They have established a human rights committee, which is governmental. They have made so many attempts, but it is always through the Royal Family and the important older princes in this absolute monarchy. Q170 Mr Purchase: You rightly say that the ruling elite, the Royal Family in Saudi, consistently say that should there be anything resembling free and fair elections, that the Islamicists would win. They are right, are they not? If they did not, despite the awfulness of the present regime, in democratic terms, would it not be even worse with the Islamicists in control? Dr Yamani: The ruling family of Saudi Arabia have allied themselves with the Wahhabi religious establishment. It is in many ways a coalition government, and the Wahhabis are co-de facto rulers and control the most important levers of power: the judiciary, the ministries and the educational system. They did have a very good relationship. There were tensions, but there was a sharing of power. Today we have a problem that some of the new generation— and I am talking about the 50s and 60s because Saudi Arabia is a country where 60 is very, very young for power—this new wave of neo-Wahhabis, neo-Salafi, who are still important in the country and are on the payroll, are a challenge. They want to be the state, and they propagate their ideas that are more political through the Internet. They are also in contact with the underground, violent jihadi, in order to control them. This is the situation of the religious relationship with the political situation. But you tell me that Saudi Arabia then would be, or the majority, an Islamist country. That is not true. The Wahhabis are a minority in Saudi Arabia. Saudi Arabia is a country of minorities. The Shi’a in the Eastern Province are a minority. They are only 15% of the population; they are 75% of the population of the oil-rich province. To the east you have Shi’a; in 3249491001 Page Type [O] 27-06-06 00:34:13 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Ev 47 2 November 2005 the centre you have the Wahhabis in Al-Qasim and that area of Nejd, where the Royal Family come from. In Mecca and Medina, previously the Kingdom of Hijaz there are not really many Wahhabis; they are of the diVerent Sunni sects of Islam, with movements like Sufis and a diVerent expression of Islam. It is more liberal, more open, than the inlanders in the Nejd. Then you have the various Ismailis and the tribes of Najran and Jisan— Giran. This is a country of minorities. Al-Saud in the centre of Nejd have successfully balanced and controlled Islam, oil—and have kept the thing together. Recent developments, internal, regional and international, and this war on terrorism, has made this very diYcult to manage, and there are new challenges. If you have free elections tomorrow in Saudi Arabia, competitive free elections, would it be a country of Islamists? No. Q171 Mr Purchase: They are wrong. Dr Yamani: I do not think that that is the case. Q172 Mr Purchase: The Royal Family are wrong, then. This is what they say! Dr Yamani: The Royal Family themselves have a range of—if you are a family of five, you are going to have diVerences in your family, with diVerent people. Can you imagine a family that large? You have people who are more liberal and educated; you have those who are very conservative; you have those who are radical—you have a range of expression. Even among the brothers, the top people now, the question for the Royal Family and the new King, and for us as the international community and within Saudi Arabia, is who is going to be appointed after the King and the Crown Prince? What direction are we going in—a younger, more liberal, educated prince, with less authority and interference by the religious establishment, especially the new wave? There are so many questions that are imminent now to ask. At the moment I do not think that if you have a vote you are going to have just the Islamists. The Committee suspended from 3.41 pm to 4.33 pm for divisions in the House Q173 Chairman: In regard to the economic reform programme in Saudi Arabia, will the economic problems and growing unemployment lead to greater radicalism and extremism? Dr Yamani: The economic situation is the best news for Saudi Arabia at the moment. Oil prices are high. Saudi Arabia is the largest oil producer in the world with the biggest spare capacity, producing 10 million barrels. It has spare capacity, and many believe that they can maintain that. The problem here is that, as we know, oil prices go up and then they go down; and to rely only on oil revenues in the long term is problematic. The second thing is that in the absence of inclusive reform, reform in the educational system, you need people to have jobs and join the global economy. Despite all the wealth that has come in, you still have corruption in the bureaucracy and there are policies of discrimination. Having said Dr Mai Yamani that, at the moment unemployment is decreasing. King Abdullah, when he became King, increased the salaries of all public employees. There are 10,000 students who have been sent to the United States to study. More jobs have been created and they are paying debts, so there is more foreign investment; and people from the outside look at the prosperity of Saudi Arabia and putting money into Saudi Arabia. Oil revenues is the good news, and the economic side of things is good at the moment. Q174 Chairman: What about the fact that historically the Saudi economy has been dependent upon expatriate workers, or people who have come to live in the Kingdom, who have no say in the way the society is run, but they are there to work, whether they come from Pakistan or elsewhere in the Arab world or from any other part of the world? Is there a potential for tension on those questions as well? Dr Yamani: We know that in Saudi Arabia, like the other five Gulf countries, GCC countries: Qatar, Oman, United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Kuwait, the percentage of expatriates to the native population is very high. We know that each one of these countries—and we are talking about Saudi Arabia now, that has a policy of Saudi-isation, and that is replacing the expatriate workers by the indigenous population. That has not succeeded very much. According to every five-year plan nothing much has changed, and that has been blamed on the ethics of the profession, or education and the fact that the foreigners come to work and need less salaries. There has been no policy of homogenisation. The expatriates’ children have to go to schools that are separate. There are separate compounds. Unlike the other GCC countries, where they are allowed facilities like cinemas, in Saudi Arabia, because of the very strict Wahhabi religious system that is imposed on all of the population, for expatriates it is very diYcult. You have members of the committee for the ordering of the good and the forbidding of the evil known as the mutawa, who make checks to see that expatriate women and men have the right dress and follow all the rules. It is obviously a matter of choice, but now they have a problem because of the fear of terrorist attacks. Also there are gradings of foreigners. An Egyptian doctor will get less than an English doctor, and the English will get less than the American. There are categorisations other than Muslim versus non-Muslim. They still need foreign expertise and technology, and I do not think that that is a big problem for Saudi Arabia at the moment in terms of security or their economy. Q175 Mr Purchase: I want to return to a theme that you were partly oVering to us earlier about reform and the ability of the family to push through reform now that King Abdullah is there, de facto. Is he in any position within the family to push forward the reforms which he was reputed to be in favour of? Dr Yamani: Abdullah still does not have full authority. He is King; he took steps when he became King at the beginning of August. First, he freed some of the liberal educated reformists who were in 3249491001 Page Type [E] 27-06-06 00:34:13 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Ev 48 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence 2 November 2005 gaol, which his brother, the Minister of the Interior, had put in gaol; so that was a good sign. He still did not force his own appointments. One of the signs we see is that he cannot really decide on who is going to be the second deputy, who is the person right after the Crown Prince—and that is very important to see the future direction. There are some positions that are alarmingly vacant such as the Minister of Defence or Head of the National Guard. He is still waiting and playing for time. But Abdullah has tried to push his own agenda for reform. His problem is that he is not on very good terms with the head of the judiciary, which is part of the religious establishment, or some of the members of the Wahhabi religious establishment. The other camp, headed by Prince Naif, the Minister of the Interior, and some of the Al-Fahd brothers, are obstructing some of Abdullah’s attempts. At the moment the schism is more obvious, the divisions between the main two camps in the Royal Family. People in the country know now that Abdullah’s group are so-and-so among the Princes. As we said before, the first test would be the reorganisation and distribution of jobs within the Royal Family itself; minimising the expenditures of the young generation of Princes—their princely salaries and their expectations of privileges. During his days as Crown Prince, Abdullah made eVorts in that area, but this is a struggle that is going on between the hardliners and those who are more inclined towards reform. We see it in everyday messages that are happening in the debate. Q176 Mr Purchase: Are these divisions, diVerences or arguments between two sides, and maybe more, in your opinion, likely to prevent reform or not? Dr Yamani: I think that they are preventing some of the important reforms. The Royal Family agree on one thing: they agree on fighting terrorism, because they are targeting them. They also agree that the Al-Saud should remain in power. There are very obvious decisions that are seen, examples of reforms. There are those who even talk about constitutional monarchy, such as the Minister of Foreign AVairs, Saud Al-Faisal, and people like Prince Bandar bin Abdulaziz. However, when the petitioners, university professors, wrote about it and all the other signed, they were put in gaol for saying that. The Royal Family perceive the threat to their rule and to Saudi Arabia as jihadis, violent jihadis on one side, and liberal reformers on the other. At the moment we are still seeing that they are more afraid of the liberal reformers. They have been able to quieten them, silence them, even gaol them; while the websites of these neo-Islamist or neo-Salafis that I mentioned—those with fatwas about legitimising jihad in Iraq—there are so many fatwas that are online, but the websites are still operating and they have a problem of silencing those guys. The real task for the King is to bring this balance of allowing more of the educated liberal men and women in the country to participate so that there is a balance between the Islamists and the more moderate Islamists and more liberal. Dr Mai Yamani Q177 Mr Purchase: You mentioned constitutional monarchy: whilst the threat of terror is clearly real in that region and obvious, is there also a danger that in trying to press ahead with reforms, even mimicking the very brave attempts of the Bahraini population oV the coast who have moved towards a constitutional monarchy with two houses, it oVers an opportunity for the growth of terrorist activities whilst the Royal Family and others are distracted by the need to move forward for reform? Dr Yamani: If you compare Saudi Arabia to small Bahrain or some of those other countries that have moved ahead with their token democracies, it has a much more complicated task because of the diversity of their population. They only became the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, united under the Al-Saud Family, and gave their name to the population in 1932. To control the tribes and the diVerent sects, at a time now when this national identity is very vulnerable— being Saudi is becoming very vulnerable and fragile, in the sense that people are tribal—“I am a Shihri . . .” The Shammar Tribe, for example, who are in the same territory of Iraq, Syria and Saudi Arabia, believe that they are Shammar—it does not matter which passport they hold. These are the problems that they are facing, and also in terms of fighting the war on terrorism. Unfortunately, they have focused first on the fight for the war on terrorism, especially with the powerful Minister of the Interior, Naif, and dealt with the reforms later. That is where they have to come in. In fact the war on terrorism and the security concerns have delayed reform. The money coming in made them also—and it is easier for King Abdullah now because the system of patrimony, that is paying the tribes and the people with oil money so that there is no taxation no representation—you have all this—slows down the pace of reform. At the moment things are fine. Economically the war on terror, as we heard from Frank Gardner, is making progress. I think that people are not as sure of the competence of the security forces or the state’s ability to fight terrorism, because we have seen clashes where there are a few men sitting in a villa in Dammam and hundreds of security forces, helicopters and police are sitting for six days trying to get rid of these few, determined, violent Salafis. Frank Gardner also said that they are mostly from the same families and tribes. Take Al-Ghamdi—one of them was September 11—some of them were caught in Iraq. There are about 6,000 Al-Ghamdi. There are about a thousand Al-Ghamdi of the same name, all cousins. Some work in the Ministry of the Interior and some have become jihadis. You have the war on terrorism and some progress that has been made, but you also have these questions about inclusion of people in Saudi Arabia. The most important thing is what is happening in the neighbourhood. There is the situation of violence in Iraq, and 61% out of foreign insurgents in Iraq are apparently Saudi. There is a very big threat of them coming back. Q178 Mr Purchase: Can I leave that point there? I am getting the message that you feel that some reforms could be achieved, without losing sight of 3249491001 Page Type [O] 27-06-06 00:34:13 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Ev 49 2 November 2005 the anti-terrorist measures, but that it would be diYcult. Can I finally ask about the future of the Consultative Council, the Ash-Shura Council. Does it have a future worth talking about in terms of the democratic development of Saudi? Dr Yamani: The religious establishment in Saudi Arabia, co-de facto rulers, do not believe in the word “democracy”; they do not believe that democracy is compatible with Islam. That is peculiar to the Wahhabis, because there are many Muslim scholars that believe that Islam is compatible with democracy. In the first place you have the religious establishment. They do not acknowledge democracy, and some of the Princes, who do not believe that you can have the vote or that the Majlis Ash-Shura, the Consultative Council members, should be elected. They are appointed and not much has changed in their role. In this very young parliament what rights would they have in the future? We have not seen much progress in that and it is not clear, except for the fact that their numbers have increased. The reforms basically—I think it is really inclusive, and I think they need to have more space for the educated, liberal sections of society and population of Saudi Arabia. Q179 Mr Purchase: That would move it forward. Dr Yamani: I think that will help. Many Saudis know what they want and would be capable, and they still want to see unity and stability of the country. Q180 Sir John Stanley: Dr Yamani, of the obviously very small minority of Saudis that have been drawn into, and have become actively involved in terrorism—you gave the figure that 61% of the jihadis from outside Iraq come from Saudi Arabia— in your view does that group have any common denominators? Do they come from a particular region or town? There was a suggestion you made that a certain family might be producing more than a large quota of terrorists. Do they come from particular economic groups? What are the common denominators, if any, that lie behind those who have been drawn into terrorism from Saudi Arabia? Dr Yamani: Initially, on 9/11, the 15 out of 19 hijackers who were Saudi, five came from Hijaz, and 10 from Asir. That is where Osama bin Laden comes from, and he refers to himself as a Hijazi with Yemeni origin. That whole region is very connected to Yemen as well. At the beginning of the jihad initiative in the eighties the majority who went for jihad in Afghanistan to fight the Soviet infidels were from that region. Interestingly, this has become more spread out and many of the tribes in the north have joined. The thing has grown, like some cancer that went into the country. At the moment, they are from most regions and classes, except the Shi’a. A Shi’a told me last year, when I was doing some research: “Prince Naif, the Minister of the Interior, brought his Salafi Wahhabis to guard the oil region and Dammam and other oil cities because he did not trust us, and got us out.” You know about the tensions between the Salafi, Wahhabi and the Shi’a who are considered apostate and heretical. They Dr Mai Yamani have remained outside this jihadi movement. In fact, it is interesting that since 9/11 terrorism internationally—and look at Iraq—has become a Sunni enterprise; and the Shi’a, who used to be the more violent among Muslims—and this is very important for Saudi Arabia—in fact as a threat to the regime—the balance of power between the Shi’a and the Sunni in the Muslim world, but in that region and especially in relation to oil—people are worried about the Shi’a presence. This balance of power has changed for good since the war on Iraq. This is a challenge for the Saudi regime, which is very strongly, militantly Sunni/Salafi. I could not say who. Was it a problem of a sense of discrimination? How many people felt, or perceived themselves to be marginalised politically or economically? Certainly the group who went on 9/11 were not poor; none of them were. But the people who are joining see themselves as deprived, and the motives are very strange. Two weeks ago in the Herald Tribune there was an article about the fatwas online and how this particular fatwa on a Saudi website forbid the playing of football by the rules. To give the details of why they should not play like the infidels, a young athlete, football player, who was 21 years old, ended up in Iraq. He has gone for jihad. The educational system has gone through some reforms and they did cut out some of those defensive parts from it; but there are still a lot of websites and a lot of fatwas, and the whole atmosphere is still conducive to this type of mentality and they need to cross the border to find their brothers; and then they come back with more anger. That is why I keep thinking of more inclusive, more serious reforms. Q181 Mr Maples: If one steps back and looks at the strategic picture in the Gulf at the moment, it seems to be shifting, interestingly, as you said, in favour of the Shi’a; but secondly in a quite dangerous way from the point of view of the West and oil supplies and that sort of thing where you have what seems to me to be a very radical government in Iran at the moment, which has taken steps backwards from where they were two or three years ago. It looks as though they are going to end up controlling southern Iraq, or have a proxy government in southern Iraq. It looks as though the Iranians will have a proxy, or very friendly government at least in southern Iraq, where most of the oil is. You have Iran apparently developing nuclear weapons, although we do not know for sure. We therefore end up with a very strong Iran, developing nuclear weapons, being extremely unfriendly to the West; a fragmented and weak Iraq, with its oil supplies in a region where the Iranians have a huge amount of influence, if not control it; and our one remaining friend in the region is Saudi Arabia. I have for a long time been an advocate of pursuing reform in Saudi Arabia, but are we not running a danger—the Americans, the French, the West—of having all three major countries in the Gulf region, the three major oil suppliers as well, in extremely unfriendly hands? Dr Yamani: Saudi Arabia has—you could use the word “benefited in terms of oil, from the problems in Iraq. When it comes to oil, if there was an attempt 3249491001 Page Type [E] 27-06-06 00:34:13 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Ev 50 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence 2 November 2005 to minimise dependency on Saudi oil by freeing Iraq, this has been delayed because we know that Iraq has not even been back to the pre-war quota, or is not making any diVerence in the market because of the violence. Saudi Arabia remains the biggest oil producer of the world, and the ruling family are fulfilling their role in increasing capacity and answering all the demands, especially from the United States. The ruling family know that the Bush administration—even if it was Democrats—will do everything to protect the Saudi regime. The only problem is that this security umbrella is leaking. The most important thing is that the Saudis themselves have to deal with their security problems. When it comes to the influence of Iran, for the first time after all the silence about the war in Iraq, Prince Saud Al-Faisal, the Minister of Foreign AVairs, three weeks ago talked about the danger of the Iranian interference and influence in southern Iraq. That is real, and it does threaten the Saudi hegemony as the leading Sunni state; but also in the long term, in terms of the oil producers, they do not want to be marginalised. When you are looking at the region, it is certainly Saudi Arabia that is the country that has stability, and the oil supply. The oil installations in Saudi Arabia are said to be secure. Most people say that they are very heavily guarded. Despite the fact that Osama bin Laden in 2004 called for attacks on oil installations in Iraq and Saudi Arabia, and Al-Zawahiri has reiterated the same thing. That seems to be secure. For the next five years, Saudi Arabia—you have the bad, evil Iran; you have an evil Syria—you have the axis of evil and you have the axis of oil. The axis of oil is treated very carefully. Do not push them. It is an Islamic country. It is all right if there are some abusers because you do not want to push them; and the axis of evil is treated diVerently. Q182 Mr Maples: Two members of the axis of oil, Iraq and Iran, are now also members of the axis of evil, and this seems to me to be a large part of our problem. We are left with Saudi Arabia, which presumably will start to feel quite threatened by Iran. Dr Yamani: You have in your axis of oil—you have Qatar and gas in Qatar, and United Arab Emirates are still important, and Kuwait. You still have Bahrain, less so; but you still have a good group there of the axis of oil. But they are moving forward; they are protecting themselves—the Qataris are, despite Aljazeera. Q183 Mr Purchase: The ones you have mentioned are reforming. Dr Yamani: They are reforming. The problem is that Saudi Arabia is, in a way, still stuck. The more the United States or Britain or the EU turn a blind eye to the very slow pace of reform, or this cosmetic reform, or what is going on inside the country, or the insurgents—we hear about Syria and its borders but we do not hear very much about Saudi Arabia. We do not hear very much about the role of Saudi Arabia in continuing to feed—they turned a blind eye for a very long time to the Islamists in their midst and the radical Islamists. But we, in the West, also Dr Mai Yamani turned a blind eye to the fact that they were producing them. The problem is, if you are looking at the Saudi Royal Family, that you have the old guys sitting there, sitting with their Wahhabis, and they cannot divorce from the Wahhabis. This has been the contract from the beginning that underpinned the foundation of the country in 1932. Q184 Sandra Osborne: We are getting the clear idea that you are in favour of more serious reforms, but you have also discussed the concern for unity and stability. How fragile is the situation? Is there a danger that the push for reforms could completely destabilise the country? Dr Yamani: On the contrary. First, I have to say that I do not think there is a problem of stability at the moment. If you look at the next five years at least, you will see the Al-Saud rulers. The foundation is weak. There are still problems. I do not think that terrorism or the violence within the country at the moment poses any serious threats. Despite this outlining some of the dangers and the splits, and the breaking up of the country—we cannot see it now, but that would be really Shi’a demanding their own state. However, it depends on what happens in Iraq and the region. There are people in Mecca and Medina and that whole area that are very diVerent. The reforms in the country would still be like a coalition of the diVerent groups, new educated middle class, getting together in support of the Royal Family, as long as the Royal Family want to be sharing power, and being prepared to listen to their people and giving them better citizenship rights. Talks of constitutional monarchy, or areas where they should allow people to have more freedom of expression of assembly, of organisation, of more economic and political space in the country, in the long term would be the only solution. Repression rather than integration will not work in the long term, in the absence of high oil prices. Q185 Sandra Osborne: Can I follow that up by asking you what the prospects are for reform as far as the place of women in the society is concerned? Is there a push for reform in that direction, and how does it compare with other more liberal countries in the area? Dr Yamani: In Saudi Arabia they blame everything on Islam because they have Mecca and Medina; so it is the only country in the world where women are not legally allowed to drive cars or travel between one city and another without permission of their guardian. Obviously, it is the only country where women are not allowed to vote. Women voted in Iraq and in Egypt, and the Palestinian women. The whole region had the vote, because this was somehow the year of the election; everybody had elections and women voted. This is not about Islam, because even at the beginning of the 20th century— and in Mecca, where I come from, the women did not have to go into black veils, and it was much more open and liberal. The fact is that they are imposing a more strict segregation of the genders, which we can see in the educational system; and they are imposing this on the women. Unemployment for 3249491001 Page Type [O] 27-06-06 00:34:13 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Ev 51 2 November 2005 women remains at 95%. There is some progress though; King Abdullah is planning to have more jobs created for women, but it is very gender segregated and still has to comply to the definition by the Wahhabi clerics of the nature of women. Q186 Chairman: When King Abdullah was Crown Prince in 2002 he launched an initiative in the Middle East that was stalled because of other developments. Do you think that Saudi Arabia has a potential role at this moment, following the Israeli withdrawal from Gaza, in moving to a position of playing a key role in a comprehensive settlement, including the road map and changing the politics in the region, for a two-state solution? Dr Yamani: There is talk that they want to be pioneers and go ahead with King Abdullah and his peace initiative. How is he going to manage it? Three years ago, when it was announced in Beirut, and Thomas Friedman wrote about it in the Herald Tribune and talked about normalisation, King Abdullah, Crown Prince at the time, had very big problems with this whole idea of normalisation with Dr Mai Yamani Israel. It is very important for the Al-Saud for Saudi Arabia to play a bigger role, regionally and internationally, in the peace initiative with Israel. How they are going to do it with this population is diYcult to see. Paying money for the reconstruction of Gaza is easier. Economic reforms and paying money is always easier. The Palestinian problem has been used constantly by Saudi Arabia to delay reforms. “We cannot have reforms because of the Palestinian problem.” King Abdullah of Jordan, when he spoke in Davos three years ago, said, “We have to wait until we have solved the Palestinian problems”. All the members of the Arab league meet in Sharm-al-Sheikh or somewhere, and they all get together in their robes and talk to you about the Palestinian problems; and they all leave. They do not talk about internal reforms in their own countries, but about the Palestinian problems, and they did nothing to help the Palestinians. Chairman: We appreciate your time. Thank you. Our Committee members will be visiting Saudi Arabia in a few weeks’ time. Others of us will be going to meet with the Israelis and Palestinians. We are very grateful to you for coming along. 3344561001 Page Type [SE] 27-06-06 00:34:39 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Ev 52 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Wednesday 15 March 2006 Members present: Mike Gapes, in the Chair Mr Fabian Hamilton Mr David Heathcoat-Amory Mr John Horam Mr Eric Illsley Mr Paul Keetch Andrew Mackinlay Sandra Osborne Mr Greg Pope Mr Ken Purchase Sir John Stanley Ms Gisela Stuart Witnesses: Rt Hon Jack Straw, a Member of the House, Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth AVairs, Mr David Richmond CMG, Director-General, Defence and Intelligence, and Dr Peter Gooderham, Director, Middle East and North Africa, Foreign and Commonwealth OYce, gave evidence. Q187 Chairman: Can I welcome you, Foreign Secretary, and your colleagues this afternoon. We are very grateful, once again, to you for coming before us. You were with us a few weeks ago to talk about Iran, we will come on to questions on Iran later on. If I could perhaps begin with the very serious situation which has arisen in Gaza and the West Bank, and the crisis relating to Jericho. Could you perhaps give us an update on the current situation and also how you see the political situation between the Israelis and the Palestinians developing? Mr Straw: If I could just introduce the oYcials who are with me. Peter Gooderham is Director of the Middle East and North Africa, and David Richmond is Director-General for Defence and Intelligence. There is not a great deal to add to what I said to the Commons yesterday, or what the Prime Minister said during lunchtime at Prime Minister’s Questions. I set out yesterday in my statement in the Commons the circumstances in which I have reluctantly decided that our monitors had to be withdrawn. That was principally because of concerns about their security. That was tied in to repeated concerns that the Palestinian Authority security personnel were not meeting the clear conditions of the Ramallah Agreement and the possibility of the monitors then having to insist on them meeting the Ramallah Agreement was placing them in further diYculty. Representations about this had been going on for many months. Then, with my agreement, the Consul General for the United Kingdom along with the Consul General for the United States wrote formally to Abu Mazen—Mahmoud Abbas—the President of the Palestinian Authority, exactly a week ago setting out what needed to be done and making it clear that there would be a withdrawal of the monitors with immediate eVect if there was not an improvement. John Jenkins, who is our Consul General in Jerusalem, on four separate occasions, after the despatch of the letter, phoned the Chief of StaV of Abu Mazen to check the letter had been received and understood and to ask for a response. He was told on two occasions that the President of the Palestinian Authority had noted the letter and was aware of its contents, and indeed when I spoke to Mahmoud Abbas yesterday he confirmed that he was aware of the letter. So there is no question that it had not been noted. The problem was the lack of response. On the issue of the timing of the response, the letter said that we would withdraw with immediate eVect and in the English language the words are pretty clear “with immediate eVect” means with immediate eVect. We gave them some days to respond. There was no indication of a response. As I explained to the House, Chairman, we decided, quite deliberately, not to give a timetable for withdrawal and I am quite sure that was the right thing to do for two reasons. First is that if we had given a timetable to the Palestinian Authority that would have become known to the prisoners, without any question, and so the monitors themselves could have been at direct risk. Secondly, in giving notice to the Palestinian Authority, in practice you give notice to the Israelis because they monitor all telephone calls and much else besides in the Occupied Territories. That would have given them more notice than they had—they had no notice—to move in, and again could have placed our monitors at risk. For that reason, no notice was given and that was the right thing to do. The final thing I would say is this: by the Ramallah Agreement, and as I spelt out to the House of Commons on 29 April 2002, my principal concern was the security of the monitors, but the responsibility for their security rested with the Palestinian Authority, and they knew that. They failed to meet the conditions of the Ramallah Agreement and they placed the monitors in circumstances where their security was being compromised. What has happened is tragic, but I am afraid to say the responsibility has to rest with the Palestinian Authority and with the prisoners themselves, who pushed their luck in terms of wilfully breaking the terms of the Ramallah Agreement. They knew, everybody knew, that this arrangement with the prisoners being held in a Jericho prison under international supervision was an alternative to only one thing, namely incarceration in an Israeli jail, and I think they made the wrong choices. Q188 Chairman: Can I ask for some clarification. You said that communications were made to the President of the Palestinian Authority. In your 3344561001 Page Type [O] 27-06-06 00:34:39 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Ev 53 15 March 2006 Rt Hon Jack Straw MP, Mr David Richmond CMG and Dr Peter Gooderham answer yesterday in the House you mentioned the diVerences between the response in Ramallah from the response in Jericho. Is this more symptomatic of a general problem of lack of authority of President Mahmoud Abbas and the Palestinian Authority generally and their inability to give directions to people on the ground, or is it a reflection of the fact that Hamas is now a factor in this equation and that people are expecting the release of these people under a Hamas administration? Mr Straw: I think a bit of both is the answer. The problem of the writ of the government in Ramallah running across the Occupied Territories has been an endemic problem, and that was certainly the problem before the elections in the Palestinian Legislative Assembly at the end of January. Security concerns were exacerbated by the fact that Hamas had indicated in interviews that they were going to seek the release of all (as they call them) political prisoners, which would plainly make the position of the monitors completely untenable, so that added to the risk. Q189 Chairman: What about the reaction to our personnel in the British Council and their oYces? What is the current position with regard to the British people who are, for example in the British Council oYce in Ramallah, which we visited in December, and also the locally engaged staV who looked after us when we were driven from Gaza city down to the Rampa Crossing? Mr Straw: My understanding is that all the permanent staV of the British Council in Gaza and also in Ramallah are locally engaged Palestinians. Q190 Chairman: There are British citizens in Ramallah. We met them. Mr Straw: My information is as I have just oVered it. In any event, there have been no reports of any staV, whether they are Palestinian or British, being injured or placed at risk. They got wind of the fact there was likely to be a demonstration and so they withdrew. Q191 Sir John Stanley: Foreign Secretary, can I turn to the wider issues between Israel and the Palestinians. As we all know, the fundamental objective behind the Road Map was the achievement of a freely negotiated land settlement between Israel and the Palestinians. The fundamental change of policy which took place in the last period of Prime Minister Sharon’s premiership was that the Israeli Government gave up on that concept and made it clear they were going to go down the route of imposing, unilaterally, the final land settlement. That was confirmed to us by every single shade of Israeli opinion which the Committee encountered when we went to Israel and the Palestinian Territories just before the end of last year. May I ask you, what is the British Government’s policy in terms of preventing the unilateral imposition of a new land border settlement between Israel and the Palestinian States? Mr Straw: First of all, we remain committed to the key resolutions, Security Council resolution 242 and 338, and on 1373. That is our position and we have actively supported the policy set out in the Road Map, and that remains our position. As far as the withdrawal from Gaza was concerned, since there was, in a sense, a happy coincidence between the requirements of the Road Map (the withdrawal from Gaza) and the requirements of the policy then being pursued by the Israeli Government, I did not object to the withdrawal from Gaza because the withdrawal from Gaza has to happen if you are going to set up a separate and viable state of Palestine. In particular, I welcomed the decision by the Sharon Government to take down more settlements in the Gaza. That was just welcomed, full stop. We would object if there were eVorts— and some of those have been talked about more recently—both to collate and confirm facts on the ground and to say, “Well, we might have negotiated over borders, but now we’re simply going to impose them.” I think you will have seen, Sir John, the statement of the Quartet a few weeks ago, which repeated the position of all four parties to the Quartet against the extension of settlements and the building of the barrier, and that remains our position. As to the amount of international pressure which could be applied to Israel, the more Hamas show themselves willing and able to do what the Quartet has asked, which is to respect existing international agreements and to agree on the non-violent path, the more pressure we can put on the Israelis; the reverse is also true. Q192 Sir John Stanley: Would you not agree that all the hand-wringing that has gone on from the Quartet and others, and all the noise and objections, have had absolutely no impact whatsoever on the remorseless process of redefining the border along the line of the barrier and the walling in of East Jerusalem which the Israeli Government has undertaken? Mr Straw: No, I do not agree with that. I do not agree with your pessimistic assessment of it. The eVect of this international pressure is bound to be limited, but the pressure has produced a result which would not have been there had it not been for the pressure, I am quite clear about that. After all, there are many people in Israel who do not want the state of Palestine at all and many who would be happy just to see the Palestinian population corralled or exiled, so they cannot follow that policy. There was good hope about the future of Gaza following the withdrawal, and we are still putting in a lot of money and eVort under the Wolfensohn plan better to assist the people of Gaza. A lot has been going on, but at any one time the Israeli Government is going to make judgments about what it judges is in the interests of the Israeli people and what is necessary in terms of their security and, bluntly, also, what it thinks the international community will tolerate. The more you have a Palestinian Authority Government which is committed to international laws, the more pressure we can in turn put on the Israelis. 3344561001 Page Type [E] 27-06-06 00:34:39 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Ev 54 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence 15 March 2006 Rt Hon Jack Straw MP, Mr David Richmond CMG and Dr Peter Gooderham Q193 Mr Purchase: Given all that is known about this situation and our great experience and knowledge of aVairs there, and I mention simply the PA’s lack of authority, its lack of resources, the turbulence of recent elections and the known Israeli predilection for direct action, was this outcome not entirely predictable and was it not entirely preventable, given all that we know, and could measures not have been taken to protect those interests which we felt were most vulnerable? Mr Straw: You are talking about the situation in Jericho? Q194 Mr Purchase: Yes. Mr Straw: We did anticipate that there would be diYculties, and certainly it was always anticipated, Mr Purchase, that if we withdrew the monitors the Israeli authorities would move in. The Palestinian Authority knew that and the prisoners knew that. Q195 Mr Purchase: And we knew it. Mr Straw: Yes, we did know it, but we are not talking here about British or American prison guards, we are talking about a dozen monitors unarmed and very vulnerable. The responsibility for what happened has to rest with those who breached the Ramallah Agreement, let us be quite clear about that. It was not the British Government, it was the Palestinian Authority, egged on by the prisoners, and they have to take responsibility for that. My responsibility was for the safety of those staV and had I had to go to the House of Commons yesterday not to announce the withdrawal of these monitors but instead to announce their kidnapping, their injury or their death, this Select Committee would have been the first to suggest I had acted irresponsibly. Q196 Chairman: Can I ask you about the process the Quartet are engaged in, or not engaged in with regard to deciding what to do with Hamas and given the Israelis have stopped the customs payments and that the United States has said that it will not provide financial assistance for the Palestinian Authority, the 140,000 people who are paid for through the Palestinian Authority (which is reliant upon international finances) how can they be kept from adding to the unemployment, and also people with guns from the Palestinian Security Services who will become unemployed, how can they be prevented from adding to this sense of unrest and disintegration? Mr Straw: First of all, the Quartet (which includes the United States as well as the Russian Federation, the EU and the UN) has set out some broad conditions for the Hamas Government. They are not diYcult, in my judgment, to achieve. Meanwhile, as you will be aware, payments of aid by the European Union, the United Kingdom and other European bilateral donors continues. In the case of the United Kingdom, we have continued our payments at 100 per cent. The European Union originally decided (I might say against my advice) to cut their payments to 50 per cent, but they then said they would hope to increase it to 100 per cent after a matter of weeks. My view is that since there was not at the time a Hamas Government, we had a responsibility, Chairman, as you have indicated, to do everything we could to ensure that gratuitously the very large number of people who depend on Palestinian Authority funds did not lose their salaries or livelihoods and that we should carry on paying the aid which we had pledged until it became essential for us to withdraw if there was a Hamas Government which refused to meet the Quartet conditions. That is the current position as far as the United Kingdom is concerned. I also believe the Israeli Government should pay over these custom dues, which are actually Palestinian money. There is a quite separate issue about what the Israelis do in respect of any aid or assistance they provide, but they are acting as the tax collector. I do not think it is appropriate for them to withhold it. I will ask Mr Gooderham if he has got more information about that, but I think much of their aid has continued in practice, has it not? Dr Gooderham: Indeed. If I may, just generally on the Quartet, it is important to stress that they continue to liaise very closely and, in fact, there will be a meeting of the envoys of the Quartet members tomorrow in Brussels when they will have a further opportunity to look at the set of issues. It is important to distinguish in terms of assistance between the direct assistance which we have been giving, together with others, to the PA’s Ministry of Finance in the form of budgetary support. It was that which was frozen back in December; it had nothing to do with the PLC elections it was for technical reasons because the World Bank (which supervises the assistance directly to the Ministry of Finance) concluded, rightly in our view, that the terms and conditions of that funding had not been met by the Palestinian Authority. It had not put in place various measures which we needed to see in respect of auditing and other measures the international community were looking for. Since then, they have managed to put in place a suYcient number of those provisions to allow the World Bank and ourselves, and others, to re-start that funding. As the Foreign Secretary was saying, that has now been provided. The second set of funding is humanitarian assistance and that has continued throughout. I think it is fair to say that the Quartet are all agreed that it should continue, irrespective of the position of the Hamas-led Palestinian Authority. There is a clear consensus, I think, across the international community that the Palestinian people themselves should not suVer, as it were, that there should be no cutting oV of that humanitarian assistance, we expect that that will continue. Q197 Chairman: Can I put it to you, Foreign Secretary, you said “the current arrangements from the European Union”, let us say, for the sake of argument, that we have a Hamas-led Government established at the end of the month in a coalition with some elements from elsewhere, but in essence we have a government in the Palestinian Authority 3344561001 Page Type [O] 27-06-06 00:34:39 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Ev 55 15 March 2006 Rt Hon Jack Straw MP, Mr David Richmond CMG and Dr Peter Gooderham which rejects Israel, which says it will not negotiate and has not given the commitment the Quartet have asked for, at that point, what do we do? Mr Straw: We are not going to get to that point. The Quartet conditions have been carefully phrased, and I think phrased in a way that a Hamas-dominated government can meet them rather than not meet them. We are all being realistic about this and we anticipate that the best judge of the direction of travel of Hamas is likely to be their actions rather than their words. It is not realistic to expect Hamas to tear up its charter the day after it assumes oYce, any more than it is realistic to expect Sinn Fein to tear up its formal statements of position the day after it has entered into negotiation with the British Government. It is, however, realistic to expect it to acknowledge Israel’s existence. We are not asking it to celebrate Israel’s existence but to acknowledge that it exists and to understand that democracy involves responsibility and you cannot lead democratic government, at the same time as sponsoring actively terrorism. These two are not compatible. The problem, Chairman, is that we do not want to be in a position where aid is suspended to the Palestinian Authority. We talk about this continuously inside the European Union and with the Americans and we want to do everything we can to avoid that, including looking at alternative conduits for funds which to a degree would bypass a Hamas government but the money would still go to the Palestinian people. What this Committee would regard as intolerable, I believe, certainly the British taxpayer would, is if we were then not able to say to the British tax-payer, “Your money is not going to fund terrorism.” What are we supposed to do in that situation if there was no guarantee that it was leeching through in that way? That is the problem. I hope that when there is a government, which will be Hamas-dominated for certain, and it assumes the burdens and the responsibilities of oYce, it does send out signals indicating not that it expects them to stand on their heads, but that it appreciates what it has to do to respond to what the Quartet has said. Q198 Chairman: If the money is cut oV and the Hamas government then goes to countries elsewhere in the region—Saudi Arabia has been considered, Iran has been mentioned—do you think realistically it will be able to get the financial support to compensate for the European Union/ Israeli customs revenues and American funding? Mr Straw: I doubt it is the answer. Certainly the history of pledges from elsewhere in the Arab world is that there are many pledges but rather less in terms of money paid over, and for all the talk today about the fact that the United Kingdom has been unhelpful to the Palestinians, it is worth the Palestinians being reminded that we have been the second largest donor to the Palestinian people. We have been keeping Palestinians alive and we shall continue to do so, whilst others have been making paper pledges and doing absolutely nothing, or precious little. I do not want to be in a position at all where we are forced to suspend significant sums of our aid and with Hilary Benn, whom I talk to a great deal about this—and we are in exactly the same place—we are applying all our imagination, and so are our oYcials, to avoid that. It does require some exercise of responsibility by the people who have just been elected. Chairman: Thank you. I think we want to move on to Iran. Q199 Mr Hamilton: Foreign Secretary, obviously apart from what happened yesterday, this is a very pressing international matter for all of us, I think. We were in Vienna in January, where we met Mohamed ElBaradei and discussed the current situation as it was then and the possibility obviously of the IAEA referring this to the Security Council. We also met in New York, just at the end of last month, Javad Zarif, who is still the Iranian Ambassador to the United Nations, though for how much longer we do not know. He was very forthright in defence of his country, as you would expect, citing to us the declaration (the Fatwa I think he called it) by the Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khomeini that the development of nuclear weapons would be un-Islamic and would go against the Holy Koran. The fact is, though, that President Ahmadinejad has clearly stated that he wants to see Israel wiped oV the map, and then we know that there is a fuel cycle, an enrichment cycle going on in Iran as part of their plans for civil nuclear power, and that is what is causing the concern. In spite of declarations by ambassadors and oYcials that this is an un-Islamic thing to do, to develop nuclear weapons, the very fact that the President of Iran has made it clear what his intention is and that they are obviously trying to develop some sort of nuclear weapon do you think this poses an extreme danger to not just regional peace but world peace? Mr Straw: To be fair to President Ahmadinejad, he did not ever threaten Israel with nuclear weapons and a nuclear strike against Israel would be the craziest thing imaginable because it would kill millions of people of the Muslim faith as well as Jewish people of the Jewish faith and it would probably do more damage in that way as well as, of course, poisoning the whole region. The concerns about Iran’s nuclear ambitions are more to do with the strategic instability which would be caused if they were to acquire a nuclear weapon rather than any specific target they might have in mind, and we have no information about that. I know what Ambassador Zarif has said and this has been said to us repeatedly, but the Iranians also acknowledge that the international community has good grounds for suspicion. The evidence is circumstantial. I have never said that it is categorical and I will not unless and until it is categorical, but let me just summarise the evidence. First of all, it is 20 years of basic deception of the IAEA in breach of their treaty obligations, saying that they were not doing anything significant in respect of the fuel cycle when they were building these very large plants at Natanz and Isfahan. Then the fact that, as it emerged, they have been experimenting with 3344561001 Page Type [E] 27-06-06 00:34:39 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Ev 56 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence 15 March 2006 Rt Hon Jack Straw MP, Mr David Richmond CMG and Dr Peter Gooderham plutonium and polonium, which are not really of much use when it comes to generating electricity by nuclear means. There is the discovery by the IAEA inspectors, which they1 have yet properly to explain, of a significant manual from AQ Khan, the nuclear proliferator, about the design and manufacture of depleted uranium hemispheres, which have a purpose only in nuclear bombs and not in nuclear power stations. And the fact that they are developing the Shehab-3 missile system and analysts suggest that this could be used with a nuclear warhead. You add all this up together. You add up, also, the fact that Dr ElBaradei in his latest report of 27 February complained that after three years of intensive verification and inspection they are still not able to come to a conclusion about Iran’s intentions and you have grounds for suspicion, and those suspicions are widespread. They could be allayed if Iran came into compliance, and the whole purpose of the E3 negotiations was to bring Iran into compliance. Since the change of government they have decided on a diVerent course. Q200 Mr Hamilton: Do you think that reference to the Security Council and the possibility of sanctions will make any diVerence to the aims and ambitions of the current regime in Iran? Mr Straw: Over time, yes. I am quite clear that we have no alternative but to refer the dossier to the Security Council, and in doing so to reinforce the authority of the IAEA. Of course there are questions of, would this lead to the Iranians doing what they threatened to do, which is to resume suspension? They did not have to do that. We oVered them endless opportunities to re-suspend enrichmentrelated activities in a way which was consistent with their national dignity, but we did not achieve that. What we are seeking to do here are two things: first is to bring Iran into compliance with the NonProliferation Treaty, and secondly to preserve and sustain the integrity of the whole non-proliferation regime. That is why we have had to go to the Security Council. Q201 Mr Hamilton: What chance do you think there is that Iran might, in a fit of pique if you like, in reaction to being referred to the Security Council, withdraw from the Non-Proliferation Treaty? Mr Straw: I think those chances are limited, although (as ever with Iranian spokespeople) you can usually find some quotation which fits with the particular sentiment. But overall—and I have some quotation somewhere here—they have recognised it would be very unwise to withdraw from the NonProliferation Treaty because, after all, if they were to do that it would seem to confirm everybody’s suspicions. Mr Hamilton: Precisely. Thank you. Q202 Mr Heathcoat-Amory: If Iran did agree to safeguards and to keep its fuel cycle within what is permitted for a civil nuclear programme without 1 The Iranians. going over the line to a nuclear weapons capability, and this was verified and monitored by the IAEA, would that satisfy you? Mr Straw: We have never said to the Iranians that we think Iran should be banned for ever from running a fuel cycle. What we have said to them is that their right to run it should be suspended until there are what we described as “objective guarantees” that it had a peaceful purpose, and we were talking there for some years but not forever at all. We were reinforced in that judgment by the fact that Iran only has one nuclear power station under construction, the one at Bushehr, and that has been under construction for 25 years plus, a very long time. All the fuel for the next 10 years, the first 10 years of its operation, will come from the Russians by contract and the Russians have oVered to supply fuel for the remaining life of the power station, which I guess will be another 20 years or so. Even if the Iranians make a credible argument that they want to ensure their own supply, they would have no need for fuel for a good 10 years. What we have been seeking to do, working closely with the Russians, was to ensure that there were other ways in which Iran could be guaranteed a fuel supply whilst the international community had its confidence built up that Iran was not seeking to use its fuel cycle for military purposes. That includes the Russian oVer. It also could tie in with proposals which separately Dr ElBaradei and the American Government have made for international guarantees to countries which are members of the NPT who do not want to develop their own fuel cycles. All of that could be achieved. What I may say I am against, and we in the E3 are against, is Iran for the time being going in for what has been called “research and development” on enrichment. It is because it is not actually research and development. The research is available on the internet as to how you enrich uranium, that has all been done years ago. This is essentially a practice and you start with 20 or so centrifuges and have a practice and then once you iron out those problems you then move up to 200, and we are objecting to that because it would lead from small-scale to largescale enrichment in conditions in which we could not be satisfied about the ultimate end use. Q203 Mr Heathcoat-Amory: If you were satisfied you would permit a civil programme in Iran and you do not share, therefore, the American concern that this would simply be a precursor to a nuclear weapons programme which we would not be able to stop because they would have the capability? Mr Straw: The Non-Proliferation Treaty allows non-nuclear weapon states access to and the use of nuclear technology and, in principle, that includes the fuel cycle, provided the exercise of those rights under Article 4 of the NPT do not conflict with the obligations under Article 2 not to do anything which could lead to a nuclear weapons capability. Iran is in a jam at the moment because the international community has judged that they are, indeed, in potential breach of their obligations under Article 2 and the only way they can deal with that breach is by having their fuel cycle activity 3344561001 Page Type [O] 27-06-06 00:34:39 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Ev 57 15 March 2006 Rt Hon Jack Straw MP, Mr David Richmond CMG and Dr Peter Gooderham suspended for a period. It has to be a period of years because we are talking here of technologies which take some time to develop. Down the track, we accepted in the proposals we made last August that in due course—and, as I say, we may be talking five to 10 years here—if Iran provided those objective guarantees to the international community, it would indeed be able to resume or start the fuel cycle. For the reasons I have explained, this would not inconvenience their programme for regeneration of electricity by nuclear power. Q204 Mr Heathcoat-Amory: If the worst happens and Iran does step over the line and develops a nuclear weapons programme, you have ruled out the use of force in any circumstances. In a meeting which this Committee had in New York, a diVerence was noted between your position and that of the Prime Minister, who has not been explicit in ruling out force. Can you explain your exact position on this without, please, resorting to the cliché that it is not on the agenda. We know it has not been planned, but I just want to get from you your view as to whether there are any circumstances in which force might not be necessary against a nuclear armed Iran? Mr Straw: The circumstances in which force might be necessary against any country are those in which the country concerned oVers up a casus belli to countries which may be the victims of aggression under Article 51 of the UN Charter; everybody knows that. When I said it is inconceivable, certainly I do not conceive that those circumstances will arise in respect of the United Kingdom; nor do I believe that because there is a problem here—and there is a problem—the way forward for this is either by contemplating or threatening military action. As I have said, it is a serious situation, but there are plenty of other serious situations. There is a serious situation between Syria and the Lebanon and just because a situation is serious it does not follow that the way to resolve the situation is by either the threat of force or the use of force, and I do not judge it to be appropriate. Of course, if there is no casus belli, there could be no legal base for the use of force in any event. We are bound to be asked this question, Mr Heathcoat-Amory, not least because of the recent history in respect of Iraq, and I understand that. If Iraq had not happened, I think people would be a lot more relaxed about asking to some extent theoretical questions about this, but I am happy to answer them and to explain the British Government’s position. If Iran attacked another country, if it was to attack us or we were facing a clear threat then a right of self-defence arises and nothing I have said contradicts that. In the absence of that—and I do not conceive that to be possible or likely—then I think this is something which has to be resolved by all sorts of means of pressure on the Iranian Government, but I do not think the military action has a purpose in that, which is why it is not on the agenda. That is not a cliché, it is absolutely true, it is not on the agenda. Q205 Mr Heathcoat-Amory: It is not consistent with what we did in Iraq. We were not attacked by Iraq. The doctrine has altered. We used military action, and have recently, against countries before they attack other countries. Are you ruling this out in the case of Iran? Mr Straw: With great respect, so far as Iraq is concerned, I know that this is controversial and it has been discussed often enough in this Committee, Iran is not Iraq. We have a problem with Iran, but in respect of Iraq, just to remind you, Iraq had launched missile attacks on five of its neighbours; it had invaded two of its neighbours and it had had a nuclear weapons programme. It was not a matter of speculation, it had one. It had had a chemical weapons programme and had used chemical weapons. It had had a biological weapons programme. Moreover, because of its actions, it was the subject of about a dozen or more Chapter 7 resolutions, at least two of which authorised the international community to use all necessary means, for example military action, to deal with the threat. That is a very diVerent circumstance from where we are with Iran, and if you can anticipate a circumstance in which we end up with a Chapter 7 resolution authorising all necessary means against Iran, well, that is fine, but that is beyond my imagination. Q206 Andrew Mackinlay: In your parliamentary replies yesterday, the FCO question time, you alluded at one stage to Iran being either promoters of terrorism or terrorism emanating from Iran. I wonder if you can elaborate on that, because I think that is a very material point and you said that at the Despatch Box—I think it was lost in the context of other things—but I really would like to hear you on this. Mr Straw: They are active supporters and funders of Hezbollah which, as it happens, I banned as a terrorist organisation in this country. They are also known to give support to other rejectionist terrorist groups operating out of the Occupied Territories against Israel and if you talk to them they have a very equivocal view of terrorism. On the one hand, as they demanded of me as Home Secretary, they object thoroughly to any terrorism taking place within Iran and asked the international community to ban the MEK organisation, which I may say I did, at the request of the late Robin Cook, and Robin was right to ask me to do so. Q207 Andrew Mackinlay: Which we have discussed before. Mr Straw: Yes. On the other hand, they are supporters of Hezbollah and of other rejectionist terrorist organisations, and funders of them. Q208 Andrew Mackinlay: Is there any evidence of them either directly or indirectly bringing terrorism to Western Europe? Mr Straw: There have been incidents in the past, including the incident in Germany—I think it was a murder attempt but I will have to get you some details of that—but not recently, is the answer. 3344561001 Page Type [E] 27-06-06 00:34:39 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Ev 58 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence 15 March 2006 Rt Hon Jack Straw MP, Mr David Richmond CMG and Dr Peter Gooderham Q209 Andrew Mackinlay: Okay, if you could let us have that.2 The other thing is that in reply to Mr Heathcoat-Amory you referred to Lebanon and Syria, and I think one ought to fully realise around the world and in that region there is a number of hot spots, but in terms of a league table of gravity this must surely be one of the most serious international crises since the fall of the Berlin Wall. Mr Straw: Which one, the Syria and Lebanon one? Q210 Andrew Mackinlay: No, I meant in relation to Iran developing nuclear weapons, where we are at. You legitimately pointed and referred to Syria and the Lebanon saying that there are other things going on, point taken, but I am saying this stands out in the sense of gravity as enormous. Just to complete this, because I want to put it to you, whilst I agree with you, and I think most people here would, that military intervention is not an option which could either be justified or would be prudent, the clock is ticking because even the most moderate Israeli Government would probably take a diVerent view. Firstly, I wanted to put that to you, and the final part of this is to say, therefore, are we sending the right signals robustly and swiftly enough? The programme of sanctions would you support? Is there preparatory work being done as to what could be targeted sanctions? Ought we not to indicate that to Iran? Indeed this very afternoon, is there not a case for you stating, “These are the consequences,” in order to avoid not military conflict even between the United States but between Israel and Iran? Mr Straw: The situation is serious, I do not want to put it in relative scale, but I have to say—and it is very important that I emphasise this—the evidence of Iran’s intentions is circumstantial; it is not conclusive. If it becomes conclusive, I will tell Parliament and tell this Committee, but it is not conclusive at the moment. It is my working assumption, too, and it is everybody else’s that I know internationally, but I am very conscious of the fact that misjudgments have been made in the past and it is extremely important that we do not make them for the future. That is the first point. Secondly, what the Security Council is willing to do depends on achieving a consensus from the Security Council, so I honestly do not think there is a lot of point speculating about measures not under Article 51 but under Article 41, which are the nonmilitary measures in the Charter, in the absence of a clear consensus. I did say, and I have said this two or three times in recent days, to Iran that at each stage they have made a calculation that if they are obdurate they can split the international community and at each stage actually they have had the opposite eVect. So it is a good idea for them not to miscalculate. Q211 Ms Stuart: I read an article at the weekend which is 20 years old which was written by Jean Kirkpatrick and she made an analysis where she thought the Carter administration went wrong over 2 Ev 68 Iran. She thought the fundamental flaw was an assumption that the people were diVerent from their leader, that what needed to be done in order to resolve the problem was to separate the people from their leader, and that all you needed to do was remove the leader and democracy would sprout naturally. Are we not making the same mistake? Mr Straw: I do not think so, is the answer. I understand the point you are making very clearly and it is naı̈ve to assume that just because the election process was flawed that President Ahmadinejad does not have some popular resonance for some of the positions he is striking. I certainly myself volunteered the fact that in the short term the position adopted by the Ahmadinejad government in respect of the nuclear dossier is more likely to be popular than unpopular. Indeed when they interviewed me yesterday on Iranian television about this I acknowledged that across the political spectrum this is seen very much as a nationalistic issue. Some in Iran also say, “Why shouldn’t we have nuclear weapons? If we’d had nuclear weapons, it’s unlikely that Saddam would have invaded in the way that he did,” so I understand that. What I hope we have been able to achieve, not least because we have maintained diplomatic relations with Iran all the way through this period, is a much subtler appreciation of what is going on in Iran. Certainly I sought to do that myself by talking a lot to Iranians and by reading a great deal about its history, trying to understand why they have this very powerful sense of national dignity and a willing determination not to be humiliated, how they feel as part of their psyche, as much as their political history, that they have been pushed around for too long by great powers, which includes the United Kingdom, the Soviet Union, Russia, and the United States particularly. I understand that. Also, the fact that the Shia religion or denomination is as much about Iranian nationalism as it is about Islam; the one gets completely subsumed into the other. I hope we have got a more subtle appreciation of the situation as well as of the flaws of what is presented as a democracy but, as one of our oYcials said, is a theocracy with some tendencies towards aspects of democracy. Q212 Ms Stuart: Given what you have just said and given that when we were in the United States some people suggested that Iran could quite easily withstand sanctions for five, 10, 15 years economically, what kinds of sanctions would work, which would have an impact on the public opinion in Iran? Mr Straw: For similar reasons which I oVered to Mr Mackinlay, if you will excuse me, I do not want to get into speculating about diVerent measures. What I would say, however, Ms Stuart, is that the Iranian Government has already imposed sanctions itself. The position it has adopted internationally, which is to defy the International Atomic Energy Agency, has not been without a cost to them. That is already happening. You have got a significant 3344561001 Page Type [O] 27-06-06 00:34:39 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Ev 59 15 March 2006 Rt Hon Jack Straw MP, Mr David Richmond CMG and Dr Peter Gooderham drop in the Tehran Stock Exchange when others around the world over the same period have gone up, you have got a flight of people out of Iran, young people leaving the country, and it is a big, big problem to the Iranian Government to find three-quarters of a million new jobs each year. Having the oil price at $60 a barrel helps them, for sure, for the time being, but it does not deal with some of the endemic economic and social problems which they face. They will get worse as long as they are isolated. They could easily get much better if they came in from the cold. Q213 Mr Purchase: Given that non-proliferation has at least slowed down the spread of the access to nuclear weapons, but that the world has changed and that communication, globalisation and all those other matters which we have become familiar with now make it absolutely possible for as many nations as want to develop, capture or, in fact, buy one way or another nuclear devices, in this new situation it may not be possible to capture what is going on in a new Non-Proliferation Treaty unless we first accept that we may have to live with the idea that as many nations as wish to have nuclear devices can have them, but under a new regime and under a new method of monitoring all of this is going on. In the short-term, it seems inevitable to me that people will proceed down this track. Will Britain and the UN live with the idea that Iran (and maybe others following quickly behind) will have nuclear weapons? What will we do? Mr Straw: I accept the statement at the beginning of your question that the non-proliferation regime has slowed down proliferation very significantly. Q214 Mr Purchase: It has been absolutely tremendous. Mr Straw: It has been. President Kennedy suggested in the early 60s that there could be, I think the figure was, 25 to 30 nuclear weapon states just by the end of the 1970s. Thirty years after that, it is either eight or nine, according to whether you judge that North Korea has got a weapon. Q215 Mr Purchase: It is a huge achievement. Mr Straw: It is a huge achievement. I remain optimistic about this. I think we are doing the right things in terms of enforcing the non-proliferation regime. To those who say, “Well, we should put military action on the table, or we should do other things,” I simply say, “If you have got a better strategy, let’s see it.” I am not saying that there is no alternative, I am just saying that if there is a better strategy, I have not seen it, and it is about managing the situation and raising the price to Iran of having a nuclear weapon system if indeed that is their intention and purpose. Right at the beginning of this discussion, Mr Purchase, I said that there were two purposes in pursuing this: one was to deal with Iran, the other was to maintain the integrity of the non-proliferation system, and I think we have to be relentless in getting Iran into compliance not only in respect of Iran but also pour encourager les autres to ensure that others do not go down that path. What has happened in recent years has been good rather than bad. Two states, Iraq and Libya, had nuclear weapons programmes; they do not any more. Going back a further distance, South Africa had nuclear weapons; they do not any more. That is good news rather than bad. Q216 Mr Purchase: In this scenario, what do you make of President Bush’s visit to India and Pakistan to virtually welcome them into the club? Mr Straw: What I make of it is that it is an eVort by the Government of the United States to bring the non-proliferation regime to a country which up to now has refused to sign up to it. There are three countries which refused to sign up to the NPT. They have all acquired nuclear weapon systems, Israel, Pakistan and India. Then we are left with the issue that we cannot accuse them of not meeting their obligations because they did not sign up to these obligations in the first place. Q217 Mr Purchase: So it is okay? Once you have got it, you can sign up, that is great? Mr Straw: No, no, it is not okay, but it happens to be the case that once you have got it, it is much more diYcult to deal with, which is why we are trying to deal with Iran at this stage. That is just a reality everybody understands. It is not okay. The United Kingdom was co-sponsor of a Security Council resolution (I think under the Conservative government) calling on India and Pakistan to give up on their nuclear weapons ambitions. So it is not okay at all, but it is a reality which we have got to deal with. You either become blind to this situation or you take active steps to bring the country concerned into a non-proliferation regime, and that is what the United States is seeking to do. Q218 Chairman: If I could just take you back to the answer you gave to Gisela Stuart. On Monday you gave a very interesting speech at the International Institute of Strategic Studies, in which you seem to be calling for international communication, dialogue with the Iranian people, to give them a sense that the world was not against the Iranian people. Do you think it would be very helpful if the United States was to adopt that approach? I remember watching this television programme the other day about their closed embassy for the last 25 years. American diplomats whom we met when we were in Washington said to us, “Well, we don’t have any real close contact. We don’t have people there. You know more about Iran than we do.” Is there not a case for the US giving the Iranians what they really want, which is a sense of security guarantee that they will not be threatened, and thereby taking away one of the motivating factors of why Iran is going down this route of its nuclear programme? Mr Straw: It would be much better if there were diplomatic relations and just closer relations altogether between the United States and Iran. The United States has put out quite a number of olive branches in that respect, which the Iranians these 3344561001 Page Type [E] 27-06-06 00:34:39 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Ev 60 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence 15 March 2006 Rt Hon Jack Straw MP, Mr David Richmond CMG and Dr Peter Gooderham days seem to forget, but maybe I could enunciate them. Under what was called the Tehran Agreement, the October 2003 one, and the Paris Agreement of November 2004, we entered into detailed negotiations with the Iranians and last May, just 10 months ago, in Geneva, in return for Iran agreeing to continue the suspension of uranium enrichment related activities the American Government authorised me to say that the American Government would lift the block on access by Iran to World Trade Organisation negotiations and also lift the ban on the export of spare parts for aircraft, which may sound a trivial issue but which is fundamental to them with the bad safety record of Iranian aircraft. In the proposals we put forward in August of last year there were hints and suggestions about security guarantees and discussions about this. So there was a big agenda there. It is just, in my view, tragic that our timing (which we had agreed with the Iranians) coincided with the transfer of power from the Khatami regime to the Ahmadinejad regime and they have taken a very diVerent and harder line. The American Government will have to speak for itself, but presumably if the conditions were right it is in its interests to resume diplomatic relations. I have to say there is a lot of institutional hostility to the United States in Iran, as you may have noticed. Q219 Chairman: Finally, before we move on to another area, can I take it then that you will be sympathetic to funding the Farsi BBC World Service television station if that proposal came forward as a way to engage with the population of Iran? Mr Straw: The BBC is doing some work for us at the moment on scoping this. I am sympathetic to funding it, in fact I would be delighted to fund it. The only diYculty is I do not have the cheque book, which is held in the Treasury under arrangements which we have in the British Government. Mr Purchase: You speak as though it is a foreign power, the British Government! Q220 Mr Keetch: The Treasury, I think, is the foreign power, not the British Government! Mr Straw: We have some diplomatic relations with the Treasury! Chairman: We were going to move on to Iraq, but a quick question on Afghanistan first. Q221 Sir John Stanley: Thank you very much, Foreign Secretary, and thank you colleagues. I have a Westminster Hall debate, so I am grateful to you for taking me out of order, Chairman. Foreign Secretary, yesterday The Independent carried a report of evidence given by the Director of the US Defence Intelligence Agency, Lieutenant General Michael Maples, and he was giving evidence to the Senate Armed Forces Committee in Washington. He expressed the view that the Taliban and their allies were at their most powerful since the oYcial end of the war five years ago. It goes on to say that he and other US and British commanders expect a major Taliban oVensive starting in the spring. That view very much accords with a very wide range of reports which have appeared in the British press from independent journalists out in Afghanistan, who have been reporting the rise in Taliban militancy and insurgency, sadly but characteristically directed against the education system, with schools being told that if they do not close their doors to girls reprisals will follow, reports of the beheading of teachers where those intimidatory instructions have not been followed, and also taking the position that the only appropriate education for boys is in the Madrasses. I think many would agree that one of the big problems and mistakes perhaps which we made in Iraq is that we never had enough security forces on the ground to provide adequate security for the Iraqi civilian population. The question I must put to you is, are we about to repeat the same mistake in Afghanistan of simply not having suYcient security forces there, our own and Afghan trained forces, to be able to cope with the degree of tide of militancy and ruthless activities which show alarming signs of growing now in Afghanistan? Mr Straw: I do not think so, is the answer. A great deal of work has gone on in a diVerent environment as well in Afghanistan. This is not an invasion to remove a government; it is done with the full compliance of the legitimate and elected Karzai Government. Decisions about the exact numbers of troops have to be made by the Defence Secretary on the advice of the Chief of Defence StaV and not by me, but obviously I have discussed it with John Reid at some length and I think he is satisfied—and he spelt this out to the House in a statement he made just six weeks ago on 26 January—about his assessment that these troops would be there in suYcient number, aside from anything else to ensure their own protection. So I think we have made the right judgment and a huge amount of careful work has gone into this. This, of course, is part of the ISAF3 stage 3 process with other international partners. Q222 Sir John Stanley: Do you agree with the view that there is now a clear rising tide of Taliban militancy, and indeed terrorism, which is taking place in Afghanistan at this moment? Mr Straw: The Taliban threat is certainly at least as severe as at any stage since the original removal of the Taliban four years ago. I cannot say exactly whether it is worse than at any other period. I do not know whether my two colleagues want to oVer their two penn’orth. Let me say that it is serious and that is understood, and it is serious down in the Helmand province. It is one of the reasons we are going down there, because if we want to try and establish the writ of the elected government and deal with the drugs problem, we have to deal with the Taliban. Chairman: Thank you very much. If we have got time, we will come back to Afghanistan later, but I will take Paul Keetch now on Iraq, because I am conscious we want to cover a number of areas. 3 International Security Assistance Force. 3344561001 Page Type [O] 27-06-06 00:34:39 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Ev 61 15 March 2006 Rt Hon Jack Straw MP, Mr David Richmond CMG and Dr Peter Gooderham Q223 Mr Keetch: Foreign Secretary, you are hearing about some of our travels today and we actually went to Iraq, or some of us went to Iraq, in January and for those of us who had been before (and most of us had) we found it a depressing experience for a number of reasons. The security situation has clearly declined, and other things. There are a number of positive aspects, of course. The election turnout was huge, more than we had in our own General Election. The politicians and the President we met, and the people clearly are committed to their own country and are very, very talented individuals, but really life for the average Iraqi on the ground in many respects is worse now than it was three years ago. That is certainly the view of some of the religious leaders we met in Basra. Organised crime is rampant, smuggling is an epidemic, kidnap and ransom are major industries, and undoubtedly there is a feeling that we have not delivered on reconstruction in a way that we would have liked to, partly because of corruption, partly because of the security situation. What concerned us most, though, was that we had great optimism that the new government might be formed soon and yet in the course of the two months that we have been away there does not appear to have been much progress on the formation of that government. Could you tell us when you think that government will be formed, because quite clearly there are very talented, very able Iraqi politicians and until they have a government the people on the ground, the ordinary Iraqis, I do not believe will start to see some of the infrastructure changes and some of the day to day improvements that quite clearly they need to see before we can see a result? Mr Straw: I spoke to President Talabani just before I came over for this evidence session. He was actually being quite upbeat about the current situation and the possibility of reaching agreement over the Prime Minister. That has been the key blocker in recent weeks. He has called a meeting of the Council of Representatives. It was going to be on the 12th, it was then moved to the 19th, and it is now, I think, back to the 16th, which is tomorrow. It was not so clear, because the line was so bad, whether it was definite. Both myself and my Private Secretary were listening, and it literally was not clear, because the line was bad, whether it was definitely going ahead tomorrow, but he was, as I say, bullish about the prospects. Let me say that I share your frustration. I have been there three times since November. The last time I was there was three weeks ago and I was there on the Monday and Tuesday of the week when on the Wednesday there was the attack on the Holy Shrine in Samarra. As I left, the word that was ringing in my ears was “optimistic”, because that was the adjective used by one of the Sunni leaders with whom I had had a pretty intensive relationship, but going back to last year quite a diYcult relationship when I first started to get to know him but gradually it warmed up, and I was one of those who encouraged him and his party to take part in the elections. So he was saying, to my astonishment, to be honest, “I am optimistic about the future.” He then had this attack on Samarra and I think there have been 500 deaths since then. It has been terrible, a very determined eVort by the terrorists to sabotage the democratic process. But they are extraordinarily resilient, the Iraqis, which is great. The vast majority of people in the country are showing faith in democracy. The only problem is that they do have this tendency to do things at the last minute and certainly for us in the British system, where we are used to governments being formed in the space of 24 or 48 hours, it is very odd. Anyway, we have got to stick with it. Of course, I agree with you that it is this vacuum in terms of governance which is certainly making much else in the country more diYcult. Q224 Mr Keetch: We also discovered what we perceived to be a slight diVerence in approach by the British and the American authorities in relation to the Iraqis who are held without trial or process, some 14,000 I think held in the US sector but just 40 in the British sector. Is there a diVerence of approach, and can we try and persuade our American coalition partners that if they were able to process these individuals as speedily and quickly as we appear to be able to do, that actually again would give more faith to the Iraqi people that this is not an army of occupation but actually an army which is there for their good? Mr Straw: There is obviously a quantitative diVerence; the Americans have 14,000 in detention and we have 40 or so. The security situations are very diVerent, of course. I have not got a confessional breakdown of the 14,000, but I think it is highly probable that most of those would be people who are of the Sunni confessional grouping rather than Shia; not all of them, but most of them. It is also the case that the Americans are responsible for security in the Baghdad area, where the bulk of the terrorism arises. It is hardly secret that there is a diVerence of approach, partly because their circumstances are diVerent. There are discussions taking place at the moment between the Americans and the Iraqis about the future of these detainees but, Mr Keetch, it should not be assumed that there is unanimity amongst either Iraqi politicians, or amongst the Iraqi public, about whether these people should be released. There are vocal calls always by some groups for the release of some detainees, but alongside that there will be very strong demands by other groups who may have been the victims of terrorism by a particular faction for these people to stay locked up. Q225 Mr Keetch: Very swiftly, a diVerent subject. We were also astonished at the large number of private security operations which are going on out there. Mr Straw: Do you mean overseas funded or— Q226 Mr Keetch: No, I mean private security staV protecting the British Embassy, protecting British staV, et cetera, many of whom seem to be coming from my constituency, I have to say. You actually promised in a White Paper some time ago new legislation on the way in which private security companies are organised and the way in which they 3344561001 Page Type [E] 27-06-06 00:34:39 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Ev 62 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence 15 March 2006 Rt Hon Jack Straw MP, Mr David Richmond CMG and Dr Peter Gooderham are dealt with. That has not been forthcoming, yet we are relying upon these individuals day in, day out, not just in Iraq but in Afghanistan and other places. When are we likely to see such legislation? Mr Straw: I am glad you reminded me of this. I will pass on to business managers and others, should the Committee wish it, the concern of your Committee because I, too, wish to see legislation in hand and I have been working on this for the last two weeks. There is a discussion going on about the precise architecture for control. I frankly do not think this is too diYcult an issue, because under the Security Industries Act (which I may say was mine when I was Home Secretary) there is the Security Industries Authority which has now got experience of regulating security cameras operating within the UK. Certainly my proposal is to have the same body do the regulation of British companies operating overseas, and indeed some of the ones who operate domestically also operate overseas and that is essentially to determine whether the companies are fit and proper people to operate. Then there is the issue of whether you license individual activities. You can do that, I think, at another adjunct to the arms control arrangements. So I do not think it is a diYcult administrative or intellectual challenge, but as ever there is always a queue. So if the Committee wishes to say something on this, I would be happy to receive it, as I am of all the recommendations of the Committee, I must say. Q227 Chairman: Can I take you back to the impressions we got during our visit in January? I think four of us here were on that visit. Mr Straw: Who was it who visited, Mr Gapes? Q228 Chairman: Mr Keetch, Mr Pope, Mr Illsley, myself and two others who are not with us today. I want to ask about Basra. I have been to Basra three times now and I am quite worried about the change in the mood. While we were there in January there was a problem relating to incidents whereby some people had been arrested and the Governor had basically broken oV contact. We did, however, meet members of the Provincial Council and we met people from both the Sunni and Shia religious leaders. The message we got at that time was, “It’s okay. There are particular problems with the Governor, but other people are engaged. The process is a bit diYcult, but nevertheless it will be solved.” Then a few days later all contact was broken oV and the Provincial Council was also in a similar position. Can you update us? Where are we now compared with January? Has the situation improved since we were there in January, or has it got worse, and what is now the feeling amongst our people in Basra about the local community and its attitude towards the British presence in Basra? Mr Straw: Kim Howells was there last week, three days ago, and he met the Governor, so I do not think the situation has got worse. It is a complicated situation. Part of the problem with the Provincial Council has been in respect of the detainees, because although the number of detainees which we hold is only 40, some of these people are quite significant. I did not go to Basra on this last occasion, but when I was there in January I was lobbied by the Governor for the release of some of these individuals, so it is complicated. What has got worse, certainly compared with two or three years ago, is the overall security situation, so it is more diYcult for our staV to travel around and that is a matter of great regret. Mr Richmond: I think the visit of Dr Howells has helped considerably, and I think there are signs that we are now getting back to normal in terms of the relationship with the Provincial Council and some signs of getting back to normal with the Governor as well, though he is more diYcult. Q229 Chairman: Can I also throw in something in relation to the discussion about Iran earlier? My impression was that the people in Basra, ironically, who were the most sympathetic to the coalition and most engaged with us were actually the people who were denounced in Iraqi politics as being proIranian, the SCIRI Badr people, whereas the more nationalistic and more, therefore, hostile to the Iranian people were the most diYcult for us to work with. Is this not, therefore, potentially a very dangerous situation should the situation with Iran deteriorate, that the people in the Shia community who have been most co-operative in the transition process will actually become less co-operative and therefore we might have a more diYcult problem even than we have got now? Mr Straw: I understand what you are saying and it runs into the point Ms Stuart was making earlier. I have been very careful not to denounce groups because they are pro-Iranian. It is just a fact of life. First of all, there is bound to be a natural association between the Shia in Iran and the Shia in Iraq, although it does not mean that the Shia in Iraq are in the pocket of the Iranians. Q230 Chairman: No. I wished to make that distinction between diVerent Shia groups, between the Sadirists, who were anti-Iranian— Mr Straw: The Sadirists are very nationalistic, but all of the groups who were opposed to Saddam, quite sensibly, developed good relations with Iran and many of them actually lived in Iran. So that was also true for both the PUK and the KDP, the Kurdish groups, the Taliban, Infasani and that lot, as well as both the SCIRI, the Sadirists and the Da’a wa, Dr Al-Jaafari’s party, and some of the other parties. As for relationships, I think I have got good relations with Dr Al-Jaafari, the current Prime Minister, but also with Ayatollah Al-Hakim, who is of SCIRI, and Ahmed Minai, who has been one of the vicepresidents of the government. I think it is very important we do maintain these relations and do not assume that just because parties have got historic associations with the Iranians we therefore should deal with them. That is certainly no part of our approach. Iran is nationalistic. There is also a variety of opinions in Iran. It is entirely legitimate for Iran to take an interest in its neighbour Iraq. It is not legitimate for it to interfere with it, but if it was our neighbour we would be taking an interest in it. 3344561001 Page Type [O] 27-06-06 00:34:39 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Ev 63 15 March 2006 Rt Hon Jack Straw MP, Mr David Richmond CMG and Dr Peter Gooderham Chairman: Thank you. Could we then move on to some questions relating to what I could call human rights matters. Q231 Mr Illsley: Foreign Secretary, you would not want to come before the Foreign AVairs Committee without having had the opportunity to be questioned on extraordinary rendition! Mr Straw: I think I have got another appointment, actually, just now! Q232 Mr Illsley: We will not let the opportunity pass! Mr Straw: How about a secret session? Q233 Mr Illsley: One of your colleagues last week appeared to admit that the Ministry of Defence actually knew that certain flights travelling in and out of the UK were registered to the CIA in spite of previous denials, which again has added weight to the argument that perhaps the British Government still has not released its full knowledge of rendition issues. Just a simple question: do you have anything to add to your previous robust denials of Government involvement in view of that admission? Mr Straw: No. By the way, I have not got the answer in front of me from Adam Ingram, but it did not add a scintilla of evidence in support of the claim that there had been secret CIA flights coming through here with prisoners on them about whom we knew nothing. Not a scintilla. I was talking to one of our parliamentary colleagues, who was irritated about all this, who said to local journalists, “Show us your evidence. Where is the evidence?” It does not follow for a second that because there are flights here with CIA aeroplanes that on those aeroplanes, in breach of undertakings given by successive American administrations, there were people being rendered through UK air space or territory without our agreement. I just say, Mr Illsley, if there had been people who were being rendered in this way, I think it is a fair bet that somebody would have spotted this, somebody on the ground, or somebody would have told somebody. No one has come forward, nobody at all. A bit of paper might have leaked out of the US administration to make us look silly, or worse. I have said to the Committee before that we conducted the most thorough of searches through the records and I have given the Committee the evidence that I have. If further evidence comes to light, I will bring it before the Committee. The only thing I am currently considering in this respect is a request for the names of the people whom I authorised for rendition back in 1998 and the chances are that I will publish them, but there are some data protection issues there. Q234 Mr Illsley: A couple of weeks ago in the United States two of the more interesting exchanges the Committee had related to Guantanamo Bay, the first of which, with John Bellinger, was an invitation for this Committee to actually visit that facility, which we hope we might be able to take up. Another was a meeting with Senator McCane, who actually said that he believed it is now time for a process for the people detained at Guantanamo, to bring some sort of legal process into that. Our own Prime Minister has said that Guantanamo is an anomaly and perhaps should be closed. Is that the Government’s position? Mr Straw: Yes. Q235 Mr Illsley: Does the Government agree that there should be an early closure of Guantanamo? As a fall-back, what would your comment be on Senator McCane’s position that perhaps there is now time for some process? Mr Straw: The American Government is committed to bringing Guantanamo to an end. It begs the question of when. You are better oV in a sense asking them rather than me, but the problem they face is what to do with these individuals, which countries they go back to. In the case of British citizens, it would be straightforward, we would have them back here. I was able to negotiate that, and that has been true for citizens of a number of other countries, but their concern is that quite a number of these are Afghans. Do they go back to Afghanistan? Some are Pakistanis. Do they go back to other countries? In what circumstances can they transfer them? There is a process taking place. I think we all understand the concerns about Guantanamo Bay. I think the American Government understands them pretty acutely. Q236 Mr Illsley: Is there any possibility that the Government will now make louder calls for the closure of Guantanamo? Mr Straw: I do not think this is an issue where the eVectiveness of the call is related to its volume, to be honest. The American Government know our opinion on this. I talk about the issue quite regularly to my American counterparts. They are also well aware of opinion around the world and in the United States on it, but they have just got practical problems they have got to deal with, and if we were in that situation we would have a practical problem, too. I do just say that if September 11 had happened in this country rather than the United States, it would have changed our politics and security parameters just as it has changed the Americans’. It just would have done. Q237 Mr Keetch: Is not the reality, Foreign Secretary, about Guantanamo Bay and also about rendition that this is a huge public relations blunder for the United States and therefore for Britain in terms of our ongoing campaign, our ongoing war against terrorism? Certainly that was accepted by Members of Congress whom we spoke to last week about Guantanamo, and it is certainly, I think, the case about rendition. Even if we accept everything you say—and we do, of course—that there is not actually a problem, why are you still saying that you would not allow this Committee to actually investigate that problem, because surely if there is nothing to hide, if there is no rendition, why would you not allow this Committee, as you said on 13 December to this Committee, not to actually properly investigate this? Does this not just add to 3344561001 Page Type [E] 27-06-06 00:34:39 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Ev 64 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence 15 March 2006 Rt Hon Jack Straw MP, Mr David Richmond CMG and Dr Peter Gooderham the suspicion which members of the press and other people may have that there is a problem which is somehow being concealed? Mr Straw: I know that some people in the press believe that there is a problem being concealed and it is logically impossible finally to prove a negative. Every so often you get shock, horror headlines and when you read the story there is absolutely nothing there. Could I just say, Mr Keetch, it is really important to separate rendition from Guantanamo Bay. The circumstances in which the British Government has been involved in rendition have been spelt out, as I recall, on two occasions where the authorisation fell to me as Home Secretary and I think there were two occasions where they were refused, one by Mr Cook and one by me, all in 1998. As I have said, I am as satisfied as I can be that there have been no renditions by us, obviously not by us, but not through the United Kingdom territory or air space—and by “territory” I include overseas territories—since the Bush administration came into oYce. Again, I just repeat the point I made earlier: if there had been hundreds of people, or even one or two who had come through the UK without the British Government knowing, or with our connivance which we then decided wilfully to keep from the Committee, I rather fancy that somebody would have produced some evidence about this; apart from the fact that I am not in the habit of telling fibs to Committees or to the House. On Guantanamo Bay, just to repeat it, it is an anomaly which, as the Prime Minister said, will come to an end and should come to an end sooner or later, we all hope sooner. The American Government is aware of that and it is working on it, but again I simply, at the risk of repetition, say that they have practical problems. On the issue of damage to the United States’ reputation, I think views vary but it is just worth bearing in mind that the September 11 terrorist atrocities actually happened and they were not caused by the CIA or Mossad but by al Qaeda. Q238 Mr Keetch: In terms of that ongoing campaign, when you were Home Secretary you introduced in 2000 the Terrorism Act. Mr Straw: One of a number, or a library of excellent pieces of legislation! Q239 Mr Keetch: I read them all regularly, Foreign Secretary! Under Schedule 7 of that Act you actually made it a mandatory requirement of any aircraft transiting the UK in respect of either Ireland or Northern Ireland to fill in a general aviation report detailing the names of passengers and the purpose of that flight, et cetera. Mr Straw: Another liberal measure! Q240 Mr Keetch: Indeed, and one which I remember at the time commenting on. If that was necessary in respect of the fight against terrorism in Northern Ireland to do that, would that not be something you should consider in respect of the ongoing fight against international terrorism? That would actually assist not only in that campaign but also put to rest once and for all accusations of rendition. Mr Straw: This is about getting access to the manifests of, I think, ships as well as aircraft. I do not think it just applied to Northern Ireland. I think it was more general, as I recall, because the purpose of that Act was to introduce legislation to deal with terrorism worldwide, whereas the previous legislation simply dealt with terrorism coming from Northern Ireland. Just to deal with this issue of rendition, the United States Government, or any other government, if they were intending to bring people through UK territory or air space, are under an obligation to seek our permission to do so, because this is not bringing voluntary passengers through but people who are by definition the opposite of volunteers. I do not think there is a need for any further legislation. This would satisfy people who believe that renditions have been taking place on a kind of industrial scale because they would then say, “Well, the United States have broken the rules.” There is, as I say, a minor industry out there which believes that this has been taking place on a large scale. There is no evidence that it has. I am quite clear that it has not, but it will go on for a period and then it will fall away. As I say, the obligation is already on a country like the United States if they are seeking to render, which is why in the past when they have required permission they sought it. Q241 Chairman: I understand the European Parliament has set up a temporary committee to look at these issues. Are you going to co-operate with that committee? Mr Straw: Yes. The Council of Europe has already done so, and I had a long letter from Terry Davies, a former colleague, the Secretary-General. I wrote in reply to him saying we will co-operate with it, yes. I am sorry, Mr Keetch, you asked me about whether I was stopping the Committee from holding an investigation. What the Committee investigates is a matter for the Committee. I will try and be as delicate as I can. What I have given to the Committee have been as comprehensive answers as possible on this issue. There is an issue about which committee is appropriate for investigating the work of the intelligence and security agencies, so I know it is a sensitive issue, but it is the Intelligence and Security Committee. So it is not that I am denying it— Q242 Chairman: Foreign Secretary, I think we will pursue this issue with you in a more detailed way. Mr Straw: Okay. Well, that is the answer. Q243 Andrew Mackinlay: He says it is and I say it is not a parliamentary committee. There is no parliamentary oversight— Mr Straw: I was trying to avoid it. Q244 Chairman: There are issues here relating to our status as a Committee and we will pursue it with you rather than opening up the general issue now. Mr Straw: Let me say, I try to be very respectful to the Committee. I know that some concern was expressed, I believe in a letter from you, Chairman, about the fact that I had given answers to 3344561001 Page Type [O] 27-06-06 00:34:39 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Ev 65 15 March 2006 Rt Hon Jack Straw MP, Mr David Richmond CMG and Dr Peter Gooderham Opposition spokesman rather to the Committee. It was simply that the Opposition spokesman had asked me a series of questions. If you had asked the same questions, I would have given you the same answers, but I always make sure that if I give an answer to one colleague in the House it is then made available for the Committee and more generally. Q245 Chairman: We will come back to this issue, I am sure. Can I take you back in the time we have got left to an area we touched on with John Stanley’s questions earlier about Afghanistan? Are you confident about the way that international communities’ engagement in Afghanistan is going, or are you concerned that some countries are very reluctant to give support in the numbers and in the way necessary to make the operation in Afghanistan a success? Mr Straw: I think the operation in Afghanistan will be a success. It is not without risk, of course, and that was spelt out by John Reid. A lot of preparatory work has been going on building this base, ensuring force protection. Almost by definition you would not need this many troops with this kind of equipment if there were no security challenge, but I think it has been planned as well as possible. One could always do with more oVers of help from international partners and there is a wider issue, which is that within Europe the nominal roles of other European countries’ armed forces are very large. The numbers, however, from those nominal roles which came forward for any active service is very limited, and the willingness of their governments and parliaments sometimes is even more limited, but that is a continuing problem which we have. Q246 Mr Heathcoat-Amory: Could I, further to the Chairman’s question, link Iraq and Afghanistan in this respect: we have two cauldrons of violence made much worse by a lot of external interference. We know that Iran is interfering in Iraq. We heard in Washington that most of the suicide bombers there are imported from outside Iraq. We have ferocious violence between the two wings of the Muslim religion, and in Afghanistan there is an echo of this and also a drug problem which they export, and yet the two main countries engaging on this are predominantly white, Christian countries from a very long way away. What reliable support are we getting from our supposed allies in the region? Are they in practical terms helping us sort out what is, after all, a problem right on their doorstep, because it seems that we are taking the casualties? We have nominal support from a number of other regional powers, but what are they actually doing to help? Mr Straw: Could I just deal with Afghanistan first, if I may? So far as their neighbours are concerned, as I said in my speech on Monday, Iran has been constructive in dealings with Afghanistan and with the international community in Afghanistan. It is perhaps an illustration of some ambiguity of Iranian policy, but it has been. They have, too, an identity of interest with Western Europe and with the United Kingdom over the issue of drugs because almost all the heroin from Afghanistan goes through Iran and I am told that there are up to two million Iranians who are heroin addicts, so it is a really serious problem. Then you have the eastern border of Afghanistan and you have Pakistan, where relations currently between the two governments are strained and there would not be any case for there to be Pakistani troops in Afghanistan. That would be very strongly resisted by the Afghanistan Government. If you move further east, you have got India and relations between the Northern Alliance and India are always very close indeed, but as far as I know no request whatever has been made to India to put its own troops into Afghanistan, and they would be a target by virtue of being Indian, if you follow me, because they would be seen as being quite partisan. So in that circumstance you have got to look slightly further afield and it has been really as an adjunct to the Bonn process that it was Western Europe which provided the bulk of the troops for ISAF with the United States providing the call for Operation Enduring Freedom in the south. Alongside the United States, it is other NATO countries, plus countries like Japan and Australia or South Korea which have the greatest capabilities in terms of armed forces. Some of the other states are involved in the United Nations peace-keeping operations. Bangladesh has quite a number deployed in peacekeeping operations and quite a number of others, so I do not think one should necessarily criticise those countries because they are not involved in Afghanistan. It is sort of horses for courses. We would like to see a build-up of peace-keeping and peace-making trained forces in the Arab world as well. Some are deployed and some are not. Q247 Mr Heathcoat-Amory: Would you say that the Muslim world in the Middle East has not pulled its weight in trying to solve what is at least in part a regional problem? Mr Straw: I would not put it in that way. I do not think it is necessarily a religious specific thing because, after all, Bangladesh has traditionally deployed many forces. Whether it is a function of the instability of the region is another matter. Mr Gooderham, do you have any comment to make on that? Dr Gooderham: I think there are some instinctive suspicions, certainly in Iraq and I think the same would be true of Afghanistan, of actually having forces from neighbouring countries deployed in Iraq, or in Afghanistan, because of concern about interference. I think you have got to be careful about suggesting that Pakistan or Iran is not doing enough. I do not think they would actually be welcome in terms of supplying forces. Q248 Ms Stuart: Just to return to Afghanistan and the internal security, for a number of years one of the things which we found was that it is all very well putting in a code of law, training judges, but as I understand it they still do not have any decent prisons which could securely hold any of the warlords or the big drug dealers. If they caught them 3344561001 Page Type [E] 27-06-06 00:34:39 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Ev 66 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence 15 March 2006 Rt Hon Jack Straw MP, Mr David Richmond CMG and Dr Peter Gooderham and brought them to justice, they would still be able to buy their way out. Until you have actually put something as fundamental as secure prisons in Afghanistan, all the other eVorts actually will come to nothing. Am I wrong? Mr Straw: I think they have got some secure prisons. I am afraid I have not got detailed information, but I could provide a letter to the Committee if that is okay.4 Ms Stuart: That would be helpful, thank you. Q249 Mr Hamilton: Again on Afghanistan, Foreign Secretary, I know this may sound quite trivial given what we have been talking about, but it seems to me one of the ways we are going to stop the drugs trade and improve the lives of ordinary Afghans is through economic activity, legitimate economic activity, with trades and skills which can be exported. I do not know if you were there yesterday, but in the Strangers’ Dining Room there was a sale of Afghan carpets—it is kind of Fair Trade carpets—made by trainees being trained through a charity, a British-based and Afghan-based charity, where the trainees were making the rugs and exporting them direct to people like us or anybody else who wants to buy them. It is very small-scale, but I wondered whether it is something which the Foreign OYce together with the International Development Department could pursue, because it seemed to me that if we can aVord the prices they are charging, which are a lot less than anything you would find in retail shops in London, and the money is going straight to the people who are learning these skills, if we can magnify that up not just in Kabul but in other parts of Afghanistan, you could really start to have a level of economic activity which would completely see out the drugs trade and make people want to concentrate on legitimate trade, something they are really good at doing and are skills which can be learnt. At the same time, by the way, the charity is educating the young men and woman to learn to read and write. Mr Straw: I was not aware of it, and it is very welcome. I am sorry I missed the chance of buying one. Mr Purchase: We bought the stock up between us! Mr Hamilton: He bought the stock. Mr Purchase: For my wife. applaud this and the more we can do the better. Other countries which have been relatively successful in dealing with the drugs trade—Thailand is one—have shown that you have got to raise overall living standards if you are to have any chance of eliminating reliance on drugs. I have just been passed a note in partial answer to Ms Stuart’s question, which is that the United Kingdom is a major donor, £1.1 million to the United Nations’ OYce on Drugs and Crime project to build a secure detention wing of a Kabul prison. Her Majesty’s Prison Service are advising the wing is due for completion in August of this year. The UK has also deployed a five-person prison training team to train three-quarters of 60 prison oYcers in high security techniques. I will send more details about the prison situation. Q252 Mr Keetch: I understand there is a new detention centre being built at Bagram as well, I think, in addition to what is going on in Kabul. On the drugs, the situation is clearly very, very bad. The opium harvest in 2006 was as big as 2005 according to the UN and in the Helmand province, where we are deploying, 72% of the interviewees of a survey done by the UK Foreign OYce said that they had actually increased poppy production over the last 12 months, and yet British ministers say that we are not going there to knock down crops. I accept that it is not primarily the role of the British Army in its deployment to Helmand to actually get rid of opium production, but surely if we come across it while we are there that is something we should do, because until this trade is stamped out certainly Afghanistan will not be secure, it will not be prosperous, and it seems to many people ridiculous that we are deploying a large number of troops for understandable reasons but almost trying to avoid knocking down the poppy crops if they come across them? Mr Straw: I am not familiar with the detailed rules of engagement of our troops, but again I can get information—5 Q251 Mr Hamilton: But it is too small a scale at present. It needs a lot more help. Mr Straw: A great deal of thought and money is going into the creation of alternative livelihoods in Afghanistan and it is something which we are leading on for the UK, an awful lot of work and money, and there is no doubt that the long-term solution to drugs is the general raising of living standards and the creation of alternative livelihoods, as well as creating a secure environment. So I Q253 Mr Keetch: I was quoting Kim Howells, one of your ministers. Mr Straw: I am not suggesting you were being inaccurate. I will let the Committee have a note about that. We have been careful on the issue of forced eradication. We have certainly opposed aerial eradication because of its indiscriminate nature and the fact that it can eradicate other crops as well. I think it will be for the commanders on the ground, in consultation with the local authorities, to make judgments about any particular case if they come across a field full of poppies, what eVorts are made to deal with that immediate problem, but I will get the Committee a note on that. Mr Richmond: I think it is just worth making the point that I think there is a distinction to be made between eradication and interdiction. There is some eradication going on at this very moment in the Helmand province, but it is being carried out by 4 5 Q250 Mr Hamilton: But this is brilliant, do you not think? Mr Straw: Yes, it is very good. Ev 68 Ev 69 3344561001 Page Type [O] 27-06-06 00:34:39 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Ev 67 15 March 2006 Rt Hon Jack Straw MP, Mr David Richmond CMG and Dr Peter Gooderham the Afghan authorities themselves and I think the judgment is that eradication is best done by the Afghans, and that is indeed what is happening at the moment, but the interdiction of the actual trade in narcotics production of the opium, and so on, that is an area where I think British forces could play a role. countries need to learn the argument for themselves—the evidence is that where there are foreign buyers of British companies, those companies then have high levels of productivity and overall output, and of course in turn bring in capital which can then be used elsewhere in the British economy. Q254 Chairman: Foreign Secretary, did you want to add anything to that? Mr Straw: He is more or less word-perfect, actually! Q257 Chairman: I am more concerned, though, of the signal it sends to the Arab world and to those countries in the region which are actually our allies in this process that somehow because they are Arabs they are not to be trusted to own American assets. Mr Straw: I understand that, and I think the United States Government was alive to that, which is why it resisted suggestions that there should be restrictions put on the Dubai Ports company from buying up P&O and running these ports in the United States. Q255 Chairman: I saw the paper and I just wondered. Mr Straw: It says: “UK troops are being deployed in support of a UN authorised NATO-led mission, the International Security Assistance Force as part of the international coalition. They will work to counter insurgency and help appropriate authorities to build security for government institutions to continue the progress of recent years. Above all, their presence will help the Afghans create the environment in which economic development and institutional reform, both essential to the elimination of the opium industry, can take place.” Q256 Chairman: I want to ask a diVerent question, which relates to the wider war against terrorism. How do you react when a major ally which is very helpful in the Gulf and which has played a big role in helping us in, for example, the training of the Iraqi forces is prevented from owning ports, or companies from that country are prevented from owning ports in the United States? We were really surprised, when we were in the States, of the huge American media about this Dubai Ports takeover of P&O, which was a non-issue in this country and yet in the United States has caused enormous furore and led to, in eVect, the government of President Bush having to find ways to get oV the hook. Are you as surprised by that as we were? Mr Straw: It reflects the much greater concern in the United States about their internal security. It all goes back to September 11, and I simply say that if September 11 had happened here that kind of concern would have been reflected by British parliamentarians. So I was not really surprised. There has always been a sort of higher propensity to protectionism in the United States than there has here, and of course that has very strong echoes across the Channel as well because we are seeing this what is called economic patriotism (aka protectionism) now being followed variously by France, by some other European countries and by Spain. All I would say is that generally the United States is open with its economy, notwithstanding some of the protectionist pressures. As far as Europe is concerned, I think it ill-behoves France (whose utility companies have sought to buy up utility companies elsewhere in Europe, including the United Kingdom) to be as protectionist as it is, nor Spain either, and I think these countries need to think very carefully. There is, of course, a wider economic argument, which is that certainly as far as the United Kingdom is concerned—I think these Q258 Andrew Mackinlay: In fairness, Chairman, it was not the United States Government, it was the Legislature— Mr Straw: You are absolutely right, but even the United Kingdom does not have an entirely compliant Parliament! Q259 Andrew Mackinlay: I asked a Parliamentary Question of you recently and I did not use this word in the question, but subsequently from our visit to the United States it is about patriotic hacking from China. The distinct impression I got from your parliamentary reply was that your Department did not want me to go there. This is where there has been from China deliberate sabotage or intrusion of government computers, including, I understand, this Parliament’s, and others. The reply I got kind of closed us down. We then raised it in the United States and they were very alive to this and what is incontrovertible is that from China this is happening. I cannot help feeling that the Chinese Government authorities are either the inspirers of this or with full knowledge and with full consent allowed this to happen from China and that for wider foreign policy reasons your Department—I make the distinction between yourself and your Department—do not want this raised. This is a very serious matter. It is an act of terrorism and it is emanating from China. What say you? Mr Straw: I do not recall the details of the answer, but I recall the question. You will have to excuse me, but I am not intending to add to anything I have already said on this issue, which I know is not a great deal. I note what you say about the reaction of the United States, but if you will excuse me I will not comment further on it. Q260 Andrew Mackinlay: At all, or for the time being? Mr Straw: I cannot say for ever and a day. Q261 Andrew Mackinlay: I am not being facetious, but clearly you do not want us to go there? Mr Straw: Where you go is a matter entirely for you, Mr Mackinlay, I would not presume to determine that. I try to be as forthcoming as I can, but— 3344561001 Page Type [E] 27-06-06 00:34:39 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Ev 68 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence 15 March 2006 Rt Hon Jack Straw MP, Mr David Richmond CMG and Dr Peter Gooderham Q262 Andrew Mackinlay: Okay. I did not mean that facetiously, I just wanted to understand whether you wanted more time to find out about it or— Mr Straw: No, not necessarily, thank you. Chairman: If, on reflection, you think there is anything more you can tell us, you will send us a note. Could I now just conclude today’s session. We have given you a lot of questions covering a huge range of areas, including some you probably were not expecting, but I am grateful to you for once again coming along. We will no doubt see you again in the not too distant future to probe these matters further. Thank you to your colleagues and yourself, Foreign Secretary. Letter to the Chairman of the Committee from the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth AVairs At the evidence session on 15 March in relation to your ongoing inquiry into the War against Terrorism, I undertook to write to the Committee with further information. When I appeared before the Committee, Mr Mackinlay asked what evidence there was of the Iranian authorities directly or indirectly bringing terrorism into Western Europe. I said that there had been incidents in the past, and promised to provide details. The Iranian authorities are believed to have been directly involved in the murder of Iranian dissidents and opposition figures in Europe during the 1980s and 1990s. In April 1997, a German court convicted four men of oVences relating to the September 1992 murder of the Secretary-General of the Kurdish Democratic Party of Iran, Sadeq Sharifkindi, and three associates at the Mykonos cafe in Berlin. The presiding judge said that the murders had been ordered by a “Committee for Special AVairs” comprising the Supreme Leader of Iran (Ali Khamenei), the President (then Ali-Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani), the Minister of Intelligence and Security (then Ali Fallahian), the Foreign Minister (then Ali Akbar Velayati) and representatives of the security apparatus and other organisations responsible for foreign policy. Other prominent figures murdered in Europe, allegedly with the involvement of the Iranian authorities, include another Secretary-General of the Kurdish Democratic Party of Iran, Abdul Rahman Ghassemlou, who was killed in Vienna in July 1989, and Shahpour Bakhtiar, the Shah’s last Prime Minister, who was murdered in Paris in August 1991. Iran’s intelligence services were significantly reformed during the Presidency of Mohammad Khatami from 1997 to 2005, although a number of senior figures who left the Ministry of Intelligence during that time have returned to frontline politics in Abmadinejad’s government. The Iranian authorities were also involved in attempts to murder Salman Rushdie and others associated with his book The Satanic Verses following Ruhollah Khomeini’s fatwa in February 1989. Iran’s approach changed following the election of President Khatami. In September 1998 the then Foreign Minister Kamal Kharrazi announced that the Iranian Government would take no action to threaten the life of Mr Rushdie or anybody associated with his work; nor would it encourage or assist anybody to do so. This set in train the events that ultimately led to the restoration of full diplomatic relations between the UK and Iran at Ambassadorial level. For more than two decades the Iranian authorities have helped to fund and arm Lebanese Hizballah as well as Palestinian Islamic Jihad and other Palestinian rejectionist groups. We have longstanding concerns that these groups may use Western Europe as a base for the planning of terrorist activity. During my appearance before the Foreign AVairs Committee I also said I would write to you about the provision of secure prison accommodation in Afghanistan. As I said at the meeting, the United Kingdom is a major donor to a United Nations OYce for Drugs and Crime project to build a secure prison facility adjacent to the main prison in Pol-i-Charki, just outside Kabul. We have provided £1.3 million towards this project, which is also supported by Canada and Belgium. This facility will be used to house those convicted of serious drug traYcking oVences. The facility will be ready to receive prisoners from the beginning of August. Her Majesty’s Prison Service have been advising the United Nations OYce for Drugs and Crime during the design of this facility and a team of five UK prison oYcers is currently deployed to Kabul to train three courses of 60 Afghan prison oYcers in high security prison techniques. They are also training the trainers from the Afghan prison academy. The United States is also planning to build a secure detention facility near Kabul airport as part of a Counter-Narcotics Justice Centre. This facility will house suspects from the time of their arrest to the end of their trial. If they are convicted then they will be moved to the secure prison block within the Counter Narcotics Justice Centre that we are helping to fund. The Counter-Narcotics Justice Centre will also house oYces for the investigators, prosecutors and judges of the Criminal Justice Task Force. 3344561002 Page Type [O] 27-06-06 00:34:39 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG1 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Ev 69 The Criminal Justice Task Force has national jurisdiction to deal with serious drug oVences and the Counter-Narcotics Tribunal will operate out of a secure courthouse within the Counter-Narcotics Justice Centre compound. We expect the Counter-Narcotics Justice Centre to be opened early next year. These two facilities will enable the Afghan authorities to hold the most dangerous drug oVenders. The Afghan authorities are also currently considering their infrastructure and training needs for the remainder of their prison estate and we will consider what further assistance we can provide to them, particularly in respect of increasing their capacity to house drug oVenders at provincial level. On military engagement in Afghanistan Counter Narcotics, our troops are being deployed in support of a UN authorised, NATO-led mission, the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF), and as part of the international coalition. They will work to counter insurgency and help the appropriate authorities build security and government institutions to continue the progress of recent years. Above all, their presence will help the Afghans create the environment in which economic development and institutional reform—both essential to the elimination of the opium industry—can take place. ISAF will be able to help with the provision of training to Afghan counter-narcotics forces and will, within means and capabilities, provide support to their operations. They will also help the Afghan Government explain their policies to the Afghan people. ISAF forces will not take part in the eradication of opium poppy or in pre-planned and direct military action against the drugs trade. As President Karzai has pointed out, this is a job for the Government of Afghanistan. I hope this answers satisfactorily your Committee’s outstanding questions. Rt Hon Jack Straw MP Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth AVairs 27 April 2006 3344561003 Page Type [SE] 27-06-06 00:35:08 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG2 Ev 70 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Wednesday 29 March 2006 Members present Mike Gapes, in the Chair Mr Fabian Hamilton Mr David Heathcote-Amory Mr John Horam Mr Eric Illsley Sandra Osborne Mr Greg Pope Mr Ken Purchase Sir John Stanley Ms Gisela Stuart Richard Younger-Ross Witnesses: Mr Yahia Said, Research Fellow, London School of Economics, and Mr Zaki Chehab, Political Editor, Al Hayat-LBC TV, gave evidence. Q263 Chairman: Could I apologise to our witnesses. Unfortunately we have no control over votes and votes tend to disrupt us on Wednesday afternoons. May I thank both of you for coming along. In January some members of the Committee were in Iraq and we have been closely following the situation for some time. It was important to get people who were not necessarily participants in the political process there but also not from our Government to give us the view from the outside of the situation. Knowing that both of you are regularly visiting Iraq and know many of the people there, we thought this was a very good opportunity to get an update on the situation. When you respond initially, please could you say who you are and what you do, which will be helpful for the people making the notes of the meeting. Could I begin with the security situation. When we were there in January, the situation in Basra, certainly from my perspective, seemed to be worse than it had been the last time I was there, in December 2004. Since then, we have noticed the appalling violence that took place on 22 February. Some Iraqi politicians have talked about civil war. What is your own assessment? Is Iraq now close to a civil war or in a civil war, or is it exaggeration to say that? Mr Chehab: My name is Zaki Chehab, I am the Political Editor of an Arab daily newspaper based here in London called Al Hayat. It is similar to the Herald Tribune. I work as well for the Lebanese Broadcasting Corporation—that is television. I have been following the situation in Iraq since 1978. My first assignment as a journalist was the Arab summit which was held after President Sadat visited Jerusalem, and which took place in Baghdad. Saddam Hussein was then the vice-president. Since then I have been visiting Iraq regularly. My intensive interest in Iraq started after the invasion of Kuwait. I may be one of the few who has very good relationships or personal relationships with all the leaders of Iraq from diVerent sects—Sunni, Shi’a, Kurds—in the opposition and even the government, because of my regular visits. Talking about the security situation and the sectarian situation, it was really a diYcult situation. It became, for the outside world, very obvious after the bombing of Samarra as something of importance, but the sectarian killing started in Iraq straight after the fall of the regime. Many of us, including myself, felt a bit ashamed to talk about the sectarian cleansing in Iraq taking place straight away, and it was under diVerent shapes: people wanted to take the houses of others and they are saying . . . You know, you are a Sunni living in a Shi’a area and people want to kick you out, and it was the easiest thing to say, “You are part of the Ba’ath regime” or “You are x” because you are scared. It was on this scale. The kind of killing you are seeing today, there was something similar happening, also on a larger scale, but nobody mentioned it because most of the victims were Ba’athist or high ranking oYcers, all taking place on a similar scale in Baghdad and in other places, and around the same figures. We are talking today about an average of 50 killings per day. Iraq was seeing, straight after the fall of the regime, similar numbers of killings, but nobody took notice of that. Knowing Iraq very well and knowing Sunni/Shi’a/Kurds political leadership and religious leadership, one importance I felt in Iraq that is diVerent from any other country is the large percentage of mixed marriages in Iraq. Many politicians told me it is maybe between 30 and 50% Shi’a married to Sunnis and Sunnis married to Shi’a. Many believe that this is really a guarantee that Iraq will never slip into a sectarian war in spite of the killings which are taking place today. Others also, and myself, believe that it is only Zarqawi and the al Qaeda organisation who have an interest in seeing Iraq slipping into a civil war. I believe the bombing of Samarra, the religious site, was carried out by Zarqawi after he felt that Sunnis for the first time in Iraq started having some kind of dialogue with the Americans—especially the influential Sunni tribes and the ones who are close to the insurgency. Because my feeling—and I am sure al Qaeda and others know—if any kind of progress and stability in the Sunni Triangle, especially in alAnbar Province and Mosel, started between the American forces and the main influential Sunni tribes in the area then I do not think there will be a place for al Qaeda and its numbers of sympathisers. The only environment where Zarqawi can benefit is from seeing a Sunni–Shi’a sectarian war taking place. In terms of the influence Zarqawi has in Iraq, I suspect that the number of his followers increased more than a few hundred. He always relied on the anger of the population, mainly the Sunni population, and on the very small militant Sunni organisation in Falluja and Ramadi, and some of them as well started in Baghdad and even up towards Kirkuk. The background of these 3344561003 Page Type [O] 27-06-06 00:35:08 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG2 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Ev 71 29 March 2006 Mr Yahia Said and Mr Zaki Chehab organisations: they were in Iraq before or during Saddam Hussein’s leadership, and the first confrontation took place between these groups, I remember, in 1993, when Saddam tried to introduce some kind of changes in the way people lived in Falluja, and because of the background of the population there they confronted him. So this extremism has got some background. The influence which we hear about in the media—I mean the attacks where al Qaeda say, “We have carried this out”—I suspect al Qaeda have the skills to carry out very sophisticated attacks in Iraq for one single reason: because most of the followers who join al Qaeda in Iraq, either they go through Saudi Arabia or Yemen or Jordan or Lebanon, or Palestinians or from Sudan, and they are young, ill-trained and they just go to carry some maybe very limited kind of operation: drive a tank and go through this area. Either they know about it or they do not know, and somebody will just explode the vehicle. So many incidents happen and I can mention one I know about which happened a year and a half ago, the one in which the target was exploded next to the Jordanian Embassy: the driver was a Saudi and he was seriously injured because he was driving a petrol tanker. From the investigation of him which was carried out by a friend of mine, who is the head of intelligence at the Ministry of Interior, he questioned him, and he told him that he did not know that there were explosives in the tank. He was followed by someone on the promise that they were delivering this tank from one area to another, but when they passed through the Jordanian Embassy the tanker exploded. So the majority of attacks are carried out by either army, ex-army or Ba’athists, who have the knowledge and experience and the knowledge; let us say, if you want to talk about the Green Zone, to say where is the American Embassy or the al-Rasheed Hotel or the conference centre or specific areas. I suspect a Saudi who just joined al Qaeda in Iraq doesn’t know how to target these specific places or to target a plane trying to land at Baghdad airport. This only can be carried by the Iraqi military personnel who knows exactly what he is after. But many know in Iraq that these Ba’athists—and I believe still today that the Ba’ath Party is the most organised party in Iraq—many of them do not like Saddam Hussein, but they opted, after his arrest, to start to regroup and to work on their own. But because of their political interest, they do not want to be involved in fighting for their political ambitions. They do not want to say, “We are against the Americans” so they do not mind that Zarqawi is responsible for . . . . Q264 Chairman: Thank you. We have a lot of areas to cover. Could I ask Yahia Said to give his take on the security situation as it is at the moment. Mr Said: Yahia Said, Research Fellow of the Centre for the Study of Global Governance here at the LSE. I have been in exile from Iraq since 1979. My parents were involved in the opposition to Saddam Hussein’s regime. Since the invasion in 2003, I have been travelling there regularly, in part thanks to generous funding by the Westminster Foundation for Democracy. To answer your question about civil war, I think the answer depends on how one defines civil war. If civil war is defined in terms of loss of security, in terms of the fact that there is a myriad of arms factions, militias, armed groups, and that the threat to Iraqi civilian lives and property can come from any of these groups—and in a way the groups are becoming increasingly diYcult to distinguish from one another: for example, terrorists dressed as policemen; Shi’a militias working through the police units; Sunni insurgents dressed as military units—a situation like that could be defined as civil war, as a breakdown of the state’s monopoly on legitimate violence and pervasive and systemic violence. However, if one looks at civil war and thinks “Bosnia: a sort of all-out sectarian war” then Iraq is not there yet. However, Iraq is getting very close to that moment because, increasingly, not only are political elites, who have started to define themselves in ethnic terms, confronting each other, but also society is beginning to get polarised along ethnic and sectarian lines. Iraq did not have a history of ethnic or sectarian conflict, although the successive regimes in Iraq tried to emphasise ectarian identities as a way to defining their power base, however we have seen sectarianism grow in Iraq, especially over the last three years. There have been many factors that have played a role in that. The most important among them is of course al Qaeda terrorism, which was always designed to foment sectarian war—always that was the intention of al Qaeda—however, there were other factors. Unfortunately a lot of the actions of Multinational Forces in Iraq have contributed to increasing sectarian polarisation; for example, using Iraqi units comprised mainly of Shi’a and Kurdish militias in Sunni areas or defining Shi’a parties and Kurdish parties as allies and defining Sunni parties as enemies. This has contributed to the polarisation. This policy had been reversed over the last six months as it became evident how counterproductive it is. However, it may be too late to prevent an all-out sectarian polarisation in the country. Q265 Sandra Osborne: There is a general assumption that the centre of violence is around Baghdad and the so-called Sunni Triangle. Is that the case? What is the security situation like in the rest of the country? Mr Said: It is one way to define the violence as concentrated in the Baghdad and Sunni Triangle but a better way to define it is that the violence is concentrated in mixed areas. Everywhere where there is a co-existence of the various components of the Iraqi society there is violence: Mosul, Kirkuk, Hella, Baghdad and the areas around it. Indeed, the western areas, the ethnically homogenous, western areas of Iraq are relatively quiet, apart from insurgency operations against coalition troops and counterinsurgency operations by these troops. But, in terms of the violence we have seen against civilians and of the various communities against each other and the general breakdown of law and order that is predominant in the ethnically mixed areas, that is another warning sign of an impeding civil war. 3344561003 Page Type [E] 27-06-06 00:35:08 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG2 Ev 72 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence 29 March 2006 Mr Yahia Said and Mr Zaki Chehab Mr Chehab: Many of the attacks or incidents which take place in Iraq go unreported. I would just highlight one thing: I was an observer for the referendum and I visited Kirkuk. I was with American diplomats or ex-diplomats, some Westerners and Arab journalists, and we were advised that Kirkuk is a very safe area to visit with Westerners. We drove there, and, a few minutes after we left, a car exploded in the market. There were about 30 people killed. I decided that day not to report that story to see if any of these things would appear in the media. Nothing happened. On so many occasions—I know of cases in Tikrit and even in Baghdad itself and Mosel—so many incidents go unreported. Somebody has to be there and to call and to ask, or someone to be connected with the media or who knows a journalist to bring this to the outside. Due to the security risks, coverage is very diYcult. To give you an example: the road from Baghdad airport to the capital is about 20 minutes’ drive, but, believe me, no one feels safe. Even if you drive in a convoy with five Humphys, no one feels safe. Around the airport, I think there are just American military bases, and, to the capital, if 20 minutes’ drive is not clear and is not safe for everyone, what about the main roads? Not a single road which connects the capital with any of the main cities in Iraq is safe. Q266 Sandra Osborne: Who do the ordinary Iraqis blame for the violence? Mr Said: There are many parties. This is what I was trying to allude to earlier. The danger to Iraqi life and limb and property can come from any corner. It can come as collateral damage from counterinsurgency operations; it can come from criminal elements—and criminality is a very important factor in the violence taking place in Iraq today, criminality, either in its own right or dressed up as ethnic sectarian violence or as insurgency operations; it can come from rogue elements in the security forces; it can come from terrorists aYliated with al Qaeda. So there is a myriad of actors. This is the most frustrating thing for Iraqi civilians today, that they do not feel safe. Under Saddam’s regime violence was quite significant, but it was, if you like, uni-directional: it came from a certain address and it was targeting a certain kind of people, whether they were ethnically opposed to Saddam or politically, or whether they were involved in some business dealings that encroached on his turf. Today, violence for most Iraqi civilians is inexplicable: they do not understand why they are being targeted and for what reason. Q267 Mr Pope: Is the presence of the British forces and American forces part of the problem or is it part of the solution? Are we a focus for the insurgency or all that stands between Iraq and a bloody civil war? Do you think it would help if we set a timetable for withdrawing, or would that in itself be a focus for the insurgency? Mr Said: If you had asked me this question about a month of two months ago, I would have definitely answered that it is necessary to get into an accelerated timetable for withdrawal and that a lot of the multinational forces’ actions are causing more harm than good. However, the situation is very dynamic now in Iraq. There have been significant changes over the last few months and especially since the attack on Samarra, and, with an impeding threat of sectarian civil war, there is a clear case for a multinational force to protect civilians and to prevent a slide into civil war. However, the modus of operation, the way the multinational forces have been working in Iraq over the last three years, has to change significantly. There has to be a focus on protecting civilians. The attitude expressed by Donald Rumsfeld in the aftermath of the Sumarra attack, of sitting back and letting Iraqi forces deal with the situation, is not acceptable in this case and it is very similar to the sit and wait attitude that was adopted when the looting started immediately after the invasion. Should the forces stay at the moment? I think there is a clear answer in favour of that. However, the forces will have to carry their mandate as stipulated by the UN Security Council Resolution, which is to provide law and order. It is a luxury now to try to think that the forces can sit back and allow Iraqi forces to take care of it. Finally, I still think there is a benefit from having a timetable for withdrawal, albeit an extended one. That is because a big part of the violence in Iraq and a big irritant in Iraq is a suspicion that the forces are there to stay, that Iraq will never be free. So the timetable will oVer a signal to Iraqis that these forces will leave as soon as the situation stabilises. Mr Chehab: I think the issue of withdrawal and timetable usually raised in Iraq depends on the situation. When there is some kind of dialogue between the Sunni tribes or Sunni influential figures and the American forces or commanders, nobody mentions it. I think the more there is involvement in dialogue, the issue of the timetable is not of relevance. When you want to talk about the timetable, we always make a connection between: We will withdraw when we feel that the Iraqi forces are capable of looking after the security. The Defence Secretary is a very close friend of mine. I saw him some time ago and he invited me and he said, “When is the last time you were in Iraq?” I said that it was only in January, and he said, “Now it is worse” and when I tried to interview him he had to say something diVerent on the record. But the fact is that no one would have an idea about how far we have succeeded in rebuilding Iraqi Security Forces. The kind of forces the Interior Minister have, even the Americans themselves, three years after the fall of the regime, are complaining about how sectarian the system is there. So it means we have to start from scratch. If the Shi’a militia or Kurdish militia are part of the security situation, still we are far from the interest. Whoever is in the police force deals with all Iraqis on the same foot, but still they are thinking that we are Shi’a militia so we have to look after Shi’a interests, not as Iraq united, Iraq for all. So we are still far away. Sometimes one of the units in the army is 1,000 soldiers, and maybe, after they get their salaries, the unit the next day is at 300 soldiers. 3344561003 Page Type [O] 27-06-06 00:35:08 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG2 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Ev 73 29 March 2006 Mr Yahia Said and Mr Zaki Chehab Q268 Mr Pope: Maybe part of the solution here is to set a timetable based on events rather than dates. Rather than saying that coalition forces will withdraw by the summer or the turn of the year, we might say that we will consider withdrawal based on the competence of the Iraqi forces to create law and order. In that context, I would be interested in your assessment as to how capable Iraqi forces are of policing the streets, maintaining law and order, without British and American forces side by side. We know there has been a rapid expansion in the training of the Iraqi forces, but it seems to me that there is a Catch-22, in that the insurgency focuses on attacking the training of Iraqi forces, knowing that the better trained they are the more likely it is that the Americans and the British can withdraw. Mr Chehab: A policeman who should give the population a sense of security is standing in the streets of Baghdad and he is covering his face because he is worried that when he goes home or to his neighbourhood somebody might recognise him and kill him. This is the kind of police force we are seeing in Baghdad. 80% of the Iraqi police force fears being recognised. Even I was wondering why we hear about 10 policemen killed and 50 policemen killed. You do not have to think too much about it: when you drive in the streets of Baghdad you can find out easily why they are killed in large numbers, because when they are patrolling somewhere they do not take fighting positions and are not ready, they just huddle together, five or 10 or 15, and it is easy for somebody to pass by and shoot them because they are scared to be far away from each other. And this is really to justify that they were ill-trained. When they started to be sent to Jordan, the cost of training a policeman for two weeks or four weeks in Jordan was more expensive than sending someone to study in the Massachusetts Institute. Mr Said: There is no simple answer to the issue of the Iraqi Security Forces. There is a dilemma here. Security Forces are a matter of nationalism. Security Forces ride not necessarily on equipment and eYciency but on legitimacy, and it is very diYcult to built legitimate armed forces and Security Forces under foreign tutelage—especially if the issue of the foreign presence is so contentious in society. The problems we see with the training of Iraqi armed forces are a product of that. As long as the Americans were trying to build the Iraqi Armed Forces in a rigorous way, trying to avoid the incorporation of militias, trying to build an ethnically mixed armed force with loyalty to the state, the process was going very slowly, because very few of Iraqi nationalists or patriots were willing to join the Armed Forces and people were joining them for material gain more than anything else. As soon as the Americans started to accelerate that timetable by trying to incorporate the militias, that process went faster, but these people had an entirely diVerent motivation than that one would expect from the Armed Forces. They were joining it to pursue their own agenda, their own sectarian and ethnic agenda. As we see today, especially in the recent events in recent days, these Armed Forces are very happy to break ranks with the Americans and the British who have trained them, as long as they perceive any conflict of interest there. In terms of putting milestones for the withdrawal, which I believe is very important, I do not think these milestones should be associated with the building of Iraqi Armed Forces, because in many ways this process is almost impossible under foreign tutelage. The multinational forces in Iraq should create the conditions for Iraqis to take control of the situation and build their own Armed Forces. The multinational forces are in Iraq primarily to protect Iraqi people. It is to protect civilians from sectarian attacks, from terrorist attacks, from crime and violence. This is a huge undertaking, and it may sound easier to train x number of soldiers and oYcers, but, as we have seen over the last three years, this process is impossible without the involvement of legitimate public authority in Iraq. Mr Chehab: Can I give three facts? Q269 Chairman: Briefly, as we have to move on. Mr Chehab: Yesterday the American forces have announced that they have arrested more than 40 Iraqi policemen who were involved in death squads. Two weeks ago, the Ministry of the Interior came out to say, “We managed to arrest 450 people who have joined the police force and they were part of al Qaeda or something, and they were trying to plan to attack the Green Zone.” A few weeks before that, the Minister of the Interior himself Bayan Jabr’s sister was kidnapped. A few weeks before that, his brother was kidnapped and he had to negotiate with militias. So if the Minister of the Interior is in this kind of trouble and could not secure his family—and that is a simple example—what about the normal Iraqis? Q270 Sir John Stanley: To what extent do you consider that Iran is or is not fomenting the insurgency in Iraq? Mr Said: Iran has a very big footprint in Iraq, a big influence. It goes through a variety of channels. It has channels to a variety of the actors in Iraq. Certain groups that enjoy Iranian support have been instrumental in fomenting sectarian violence in Iraq. Specifically I would mention the Supreme Council of Islamic Revolution in Iraq and the associated Badr Brigade. These are two organisations that have been established in Iran and have benefited from direct Iranian material and moral support for many years. However, the Iranian involvement in Iraq is more complex than that. They have been supporting nationalist group, insurgents group and so on. Iran, I believe, views Iraq as an insurance policy, as a card that it could use should it be subjected to a form of perceived or expected aggression from the United States, and therefore, what Iranian influence in Iraq has been over the three years is to try to keep the situation at a certain level of instability, so that it could use it as leverage in relation with the United States. Mr Chehab: I think Iran is in a unique situation. They have the biggest influence in Iraq, even without sending their own army or militias, because they have Iraqis there who are fully pro-Iran in terms of 3344561003 Page Type [E] 27-06-06 00:35:08 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG2 Ev 74 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence 29 March 2006 Mr Yahia Said and Mr Zaki Chehab politics, from Al-Sadur, who has militia, taking salaries for each who joined the army and everyone knows that it is Iranian money. You mentioned as well al-Hakim, and everyone knows his background and how the Badr Brigade was first established on Iranian soil and the kind of relationship which Abdul Aziz al-Hakim has with the Iran leadership. And the same thing with the present Prime Minister al-Jaafari. Knowing and hearing American briefings, they were definitely shocked at the way things were going. They were hoping at some stage after this last election to see some change in Iraq. They were hoping that Allawi with Chalabi and others can make a bloc which will take power away from these pro-Iran groups, but unfortunately it was not like this. That is why it was a shock in the Green Zone, when this religious Shi’a secured the majority. That is why the Americans are saying now that they are not going to finance or train or spend the taxpayer’s money on supporting what they call security ministers, like the Minister of the Interior, who are definitely known to be pro-Iranian. One of the important things that happened in Iraq straight after the fall of the regime is the attacks and burning of oYces and the documents about things like the land registry, and this left matters especially the areas in the South, open for heavy Iranian influence, because at some stage Saddam had expelled tens of thousands of people who were of Iranian origin to Iran. Straight after the fall of the regime, people say even more Iranians, those that had been expelled and others, started moving back to Iraq where nobody can question their backgrounds to see if they are really Iraqis or not as the records were destroyed. Many of them, they talk about their involvement in voting and the election and the influence they would have. There is no document to say this, because everything was burned in Iraq. Q271 Richard Younger-Ross: Do you think it is possible that there are some provinces where we could eVectively withdraw coalition forces now? Are there particular provinces, perhaps outside of Basra, where that might be feasible—that is, where there is enough self-governance? Mr Said: That was the situation for some time now, that there are provinces like the Muthanna province, and, to a lesser degree, Thi Qar, Nasiriya province, which were pretty peaceful. The situation now has changed because there is a real threat of a complete breakdown or paralysis in the Government in Baghdad and this may reverberate in terms of instability, even into areas which have been stable until now. I honestly cannot recommend—and it pains me greatly, because I have been a great opponent of a speedy withdrawal of foreign forces from Iraq—the withdrawal of forces anywhere in Iraq at this moment. I believe it is possible, in these provinces which are quiet, for the forces to take a lower profile, to hand more competences to Iraqi forces and to attend to other matters. One problem, for example, that was perceived acutely in the relatively stable provinces, is that, despite the stability in these provinces, there was very little in terms of economic reconstruction, so there are other tasks there that could be carried out with the help of the multinational forces. Q272 Richard Younger-Ross: In January, we were advised that there were some Sunni insurgent groups which were thinking of coming on the inside, laying down their arms and becoming part of the democratic process. Are you aware of that? Had that come through to you? If that was the case, are you aware whether that has changed now, post the Sumarra bombing? Mr Chehab: I suspect that at some stage some groups are willing to surrender. It was reported in the media here, it was even in some Arabic media and the American media, but, knowing people there—and I sent people who work for me to alRamadi and others—they denied that there is any change. There was some hope. The kind of approach that the Americans started in the last few months was of importance. They managed at least to start getting through to the influential Sunni tribes, but there are no concrete agreements yet. They are still testing the water. And the best test on this front was the election. In spite of the threats made by Zarqawi a few days before the last election, nothing happened, because he realised that Sunnis for the first time were willing to participate in the political process. What really happened in the last few weeks is this kind of progress in the dialogue between the Americans and the Sunnis. Shi’a have looked at it from a diVerent way because they thought now the Americans are trying to improve the relation with the Sunni at the expense of the Shi’a. I think that is where we need a much better balanced approach, so you can convince the Shi’s that it is in the interests of the country and their interests that we are doing such a thing, not to do this because we felt or the Americans felt at some stage that we have to forget about the Shi’a because we found out they are proIranians, there is no hope for them, they will not support our policies in Iraq. That is why it is a very delicate situation. The call for withdrawal at some stage was at its best maybe before the election, but, after the election, because of the kind of communications going and because of the regular meetings between the American ambassadors and influential Sunni leaders in Iraq, I have not heard any calls to see American withdrawal. I think the more there is engagement for both parties in the political process, the more people will say, “Okay, let’s put it aside, let’s prepare the ground.” That is what we have started to say: Why do you not think of policies to see what we are going to do with the militias, either Shi’as or Kurds or the insurgency? because until today there is no solution for the Sunni insurgency. The majority of them are ex-Army oYcers, soldiers, and these ones have no jobs, no income, so we have to find a way of solving their problems. The de-Ba’athification policy is when you ban more than one million members of the Ba’ath party from taking any job in the government. So why should we do that? Especially since a large number of them have nothing to do with Saddam Hussein’s policies: they just joined the Ba’ath Party 3344561003 Page Type [O] 27-06-06 00:35:08 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG2 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Ev 75 29 March 2006 Mr Yahia Said and Mr Zaki Chehab for them to get a job in the government and to manage to get scholarships for their kids. So we have to find solutions. If Sunni in the Sunni Triangle find that there is some hope for them to get involved in daily life and to feel that they have a say in the political future of their country I think then we can make progress. Still today we have seen nothing of this. Q273 Ms Stuart: Let us try to move on from a greater understanding of the problem and see whether there are some solutions, following on from what Mr Pope said of the withdrawal of troops and events. One of the big problems Iraq faces is that, where you have Security Forces which have a personal loyalty, once you remove that personal loyalty people will look for other units to identify with. The western idea of functioning democracies is that our loyalty is to the institutions and to the rule of law. Is there at the moment anything within Iraq where you could have that transfer of loyalty in the absence of a functioning government? What would be your advice to any of the Security Forces? What do you owe your loyalty to, given that you cannot identify with government? Secondly, I am very struck that we talk about Sunnis and Shia’s and I have not heard anything about the Kurds so far. Does that mean there is no problem or is it a diVerent kind of problem? The third observation is that we heard from the United States of a document which they produced in terms of media and development of the media It seemed to me there are masses of newspapers, masses of radio stations, masses of television stations there, yet, Mr Chehab, you say we do not know what is going on. That does not quite add up in my mind. I wonder whether Mr Said would like to answer first. Mr Said: There are two problems here with the situation. There is a need to transition thinking about Iraq from the insurgency/counterinsurgency situation to a civil war situation. Even if civil war is not taking place now, this is the major threat in Iraq today and this is where the situation is shifting. Even when we talk about engaging the Sunnis politically and also security-wise, bringing Sunni insurgents into the Armed Forces, this is happening under the wrong set of premises. This is happening as providing the third leg of the pot, if you like, of allowing the Sunnis to have their own militia, their own security structure, to defend their own corner, but this is exacerbating sectarian tensions. This is further deepening polarisation. You have rightly suggested that it is important to build institutions that everyone in Iraq believes belong to them. This does not really begin with the Armed Forces and Security Forces but with the government itself. Unfortunately, the two successive elections which took place in Iraq and the adoption of the constitution, as positive as they were in their own right, have produced a Parliament and government that is defined in sectarian terms, defined in sectarian corners. Q274 Ms Stuart: Sectarian rather than federal? Mr Said: Yes. Q275 Ms Stuart: They use the word “federal” but you do not think it is a federal structure. Mr Said: I do not think Iraq is yet in a federal mode. Federalism is about sharing resources, about sharing power. Iraqi politicians, and the elites that have been produced through the political process and are now legitimately elected representatives, are thinking about dividing resources, about dividing power. The contentious negotiations on the formation of government are a case in point: it is all about who gets what—who gets which part of the security structures, who gets which part of the resources; who gets which part of the media. You mentioned the media: in Iraq there are very few national media outlets. There are regional and even the ones which have federal coverage or national coverage are biased in sectarian ways, including the national Iraqi television. The political process is currently producing a picture that will further deepen division within society. It is quite a dilemma how you reverse that in the absence of political leaders who are willing to look at Iraq as a nation and try to build institutions that are common to all Iraqis. But, just to go back to your question, you cannot start this process through the Armed Forces and the Security Forces. You need political legitimacy that is based on a diVerent understanding of Iraq from the one that is prevailing today in terms of Kurdis-Shia-Sunni. Q276 Mr Horam: Mr Said, you talked earlier about the paralysis in Baghdad and you paint rather a bleak picture of the increasing sectarian grab of bits of government. Is it as hopeless as that? For example, they formed a National Security Council, which you could argue is some recognition of the need to keep the country together and to bring in people of whatever background and ethnic origin. Is it hopeless? Mr Said: It is not entirely hopeless, obviously, and the move to set up a Security Council is in some respects a positive step. It is a step in the right direction but it is a very technical step. First of all, the Security Council enshrines the power that the party leaders have over the political process. All the major decisions in Iraq were taking place in meetings between Jalal Talabani, Barazani, Jaafari— Q277 Mr Horam: So it formalises— Mr Said: It formalises that process. The hope from that is that once that process is formalised it is possible to build a government that looks more like a team than like a power division deal. The paralysis in Baghdad over the last year was because the Minister of the Interior does not owe any allegiance to the Prime Minister. The Minister of the Interior is a representative of al-Hakim; he does what alHakim tells him to do. The Minister of Foreign AVairs is the representative of Barazani; he does what Barazani tells him to do. The Prime Minister has his own agenda. 3344561003 Page Type [E] 27-06-06 00:35:08 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG2 Ev 76 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence 29 March 2006 Mr Yahia Said and Mr Zaki Chehab Q278 Mr Horam: How do they get out of the trap? Mr Said: The move to the Security Council may open the door to that because it moves the political bargaining, horse trading, into the Security Council, and hopefully will allow the creation of a national government of technocrats. One issue is where hope is in Iraq. Hope in Iraq is if you remove the top of the political establishment. There is a lot of hope below in Iraq: Iraqi professionals, Iraqi civil servants, Iraqi intellectuals, academics and so on, who are abhorred by what they see being done to their country today, people who stayed in Iraq over the decades and kept their country ticking, despite the madness at the top from Saddam and his cronies. But these people are disempowered by a system that has propelled these politicians to the top who are seeking to define themselves, who are choosing to define themselves in ethnic and sectarian terms. Q279 Mr Horam: You want government by civil servants and technocrats? Mr Said: This is what happened and why Japan and Germany were a success after World War Two, because they were run not necessarily by politicians but by technocrats, by people who decided to move on and rebuild their country. The tragedy of Iraq today is it is run largely by exiled politicians who increasingly define themselves in ethnic and sectarian terms and find it convenient. One of the problems with Iraq is that you have these politicians who have very little grass roots support, apart from Al Sadr. Nobody has a political party that works all the way to the bottom. These are people who live in the stratosphere and the only way they mobilise is through fomenting sectarian and ethnic passions. One solution may be in the Security Council, although I do not have much confidence in that, in that you move those people into that little club of theirs and maybe that will open the way to a government of technocrats. Q280 Chairman: The picture you are painting is much bleaker than I thought when I was there in January. I was quite pessimistic when I came back in January. Is there anything significant that can be done to break this political deadlock? The elections were in December; we are almost into April and we still do not have a government. Is there something that the international community, the coalition, the UN or anybody can do to push something that will change the dynamics or do we have to rely on the internal Iraqi politicians to go through an interminable process and come up with the right answer? Mr Said: The Iraqi political process has strayed oV the right track quite a while ago. It is impossible to sit back and allow these Iraqis to work at their problems together. I must caveat that. The outbursts of violence do every now and then shock Iraqi politicians into some responsible action but even then, most recently, the events in the so-called mosque where US military forces attacked a certain militia in Baghdad, the response of the Iraqi politicians is to boycott the government forming negotiations. The country is burning and they get upset with the Americans and punish the Iraqi people. Clearly we have a problem with the Iraqi political classes. However, the international community has leverage. Most of these politicians, as all politicians do, crave recognition and acceptance by the international community. They crave support and the membership of a club of the free markets. The international community will not accept an Iraq of desperate cantons. The international community will not accept an Iraq with a dysfunctional federal government. There could be pressure put on them to amend the constitution—and this is one of the key elements we have not addressed yet—in a way that would produce viable federalism as opposed to a loose club of regions. There is definitely a need for robust action on the Iraqi armed forces, Iraqi rogue security forces and militias. Lastly, there is a need to increase and ratchet up work to protect civilians. It is not acceptable for a multinational force whose very mandate is the protection of Iraqi civilians to sit back and say, “We will let the Iraqis sort it out.” Mr Chehab: The American ambassador and Baghdad have delivered a message to Al Hakim that the Americans have no interest in seeing Al Jaafari back in power. They are more in favour of Adela Bumathi, who is number two in the Al Hakim party. He is well known for his good relationship with the Kurds, the Americans and some other Iraqis. He is ex-Baathist. He was a Communist before, so they are hoping that his liberal open-mindedness will make a little bit of a change in terms of dealing with the others. These are the kind of approaches we are seeing which led to the chaos. It was like trial and error from day one. Otherwise we would have saved three years. Somebody asked a question about the attitude of the American or British forces on the ground. Believe me; I was there from day one and the majority of Iraqis have welcomed the American and British forces, but the kind of mistakes, the attitude, starts building up. Many decisions have been taken and now we talk about sectarianism. It is a danger. We have encouraged it. Zalmaka himself has encouraged it, even from his days in London when he was looking after the operation in London. He decided to give power to Sunnis and the Kurds. That is the kind of attitude that the Americans started from day one. It is a danger and we have to avoid it. If one talks about sectarianism, Shiite in general, they do not want it because they know that if they want to go into war with Sunnis they will end up in the south and start fighting each other. One single incident happened a few weeks ago. Al Sadr, when he heard of a call by Al Hakim for Iran to intervene so that they can negotiate with the Americans to have some kind of dialogue, Al Jaafari and Al Sadr were not happy with that. They know that if they want to end up fighting the others and having their own corner in the south they will end up fighting each other. They have an interest in being part of the whole country. If you ask any Sunni, “Do you want to see American forces leaving Iraq?” they will say no. In terms of the media, there is a large number of media organisations and so many radio stations, television stations and newspapers, but still it is very 3344561003 Page Type [O] 27-06-06 00:35:08 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG2 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Ev 77 29 March 2006 Mr Yahia Said and Mr Zaki Chehab important. I cannot rely on a correspondent who is based in Baghdad who is a Shia to go and travel to the Sunni areas. He has no access; he is not trusted. The same things would also be applied to a Kurd or a Sunni if he wants to travel. For me as an outsider, to have a real picture about what is going on, I have to look at the story from three diVerent angles to see what the Sunnis, the Shia and the Kurds are saying about it. The trouble with most NGOs outside is they have their own people. In the north they have Kurds. In the Sunni triangle they have Sunnis. In the south they have Shiites. Even when they work together, each one reflects his own area, not looking at Iraq as a country that is united. There is a need even in this regard to bring these people who are working in the same organisations, to get them used to each other, to get them to understand each other and work to build something. When you talk about the security organisations, the police and the army, if you visit the Ministry of Foreign AVairs in Baghdad, you hardly find someone who speaks Arabic because all the security people are Kurds. If you go to the Ministry of the Interior, they are all Shia. If you go to the Ministry of Defence, you will find Sunnis. That is the kind of institutional thing in this country today. Q281 Mr Purchase: You paint a most awful picture of what is happening there. In other circumstances, we frequently talk about confidence building measures between communities to develop a level which might allow a proper political process to come into being and ultimately for a government to be formed. The picture you paint is so bad that we are not even at a point, are we, where people would sit down and agree what they ought to be working towards? In those circumstances, is there much point in the Americans and the British and other allied forces remaining for very much longer, if there is no willingness in Iraqi society to move forward at all, as seems to be the case? Mr Chehab: I still believe there are means to pressurise them to get together. If you withdraw, you are just handing a victory to al Qaeda and militancy and all these elements. Q282 Mr Purchase: We make the battle ground against al Qaeda Iraq? Mr Chehab: It seems so. We have given al Qaeda the environment to grow. The recruitment of suicide bombers in Iraq in the last few months has been at its best. If you look at what is happening every day, to see 10 or fifteen suicide bombers a day, if it reflects one thing it reflects how these militant organisations have large numbers who are willing to die. Otherwise the kind of volunteers are very limited. They will not send fifteen to be killed in one day but there is a large number that can easily be recruited. Either they have been promised they will go to heaven or they are angry or some of their relatives have been killed. Q283 Mr Purchase: In this battle that you suggest is going on anyway, how on earth do we keep on side the moderate Iraqi who desperately wants peace, wants to build a society fit for their children? How can that be so if the west is recognising de facto that there is a battle against al Qaeda being fought out in Iraq? How do we keep other people on side? Mr Chehab: The biggest mistake is we relied on people we knew. We tried to rely on the opposition figures who were living here. We never went for people who were influential in their own country. I do not expect an influential Sunni tribal leader who lives in Al Amghar with a very large tribe of 15,000 men behind him to wait at the gates of the American and English embassies to ask for a role in this country. We have relied on a group of people who lived here, who have no popularity there, who have money and support from outside. We have invested too much with them. If I want to invest in Allawi, how many seats in Parliament did he manage to get? 20. Al Bachali? All the money we have paid, all the support, and he did not even secure a single seat for himself in Parliament. Those are the kind of people we have invested in and we hope that they are moderate, that they will be pro-western and they have open minds. It does not mean that the Iraqis or the tribes there are extreme. They are not. People have respect and dignity. Mr Said: What you could do to keep the Iraqis on side, the ones who want a peaceful and united nation, is to protect them. What Iraqis have not seen from the multinational forces in Iraq is enough protection. Indeed, if the multinational forces are protecting anyone in Iraq, they are protecting the political elite. These are the guys who get the escort and the 24 hour electricity, water and so on, but there are Iraqis who are committed to a national project, just below the surface of the top level of power, who need empowerment and protection. These are the key to preventing the worst from happening, but this will require a complete rethinking of the posture and the role of the multinational forces. Q284 Mr Purchase: I agree with you. How on earth however, in these circumstances, do you build the physical infrastructure and the personnel expertise to oVer that protection to the every day Iraqi who desperately wants to move on? We cannot protect the institutions that are working to develop that human and physical infrastructure, let alone deliver the service. Mr Said: I am not suggesting there is an easy answer to this. Obviously, the posture and the profile of the forces in Iraq with 8,000 British troops among three or four million Iraqis means there is not enough footprint there to provide security for everyone. However, one can start small. Just to give you a comparison of the situation in Iraq today, think of Iraq today as the early days of the war in Bosnia. Do you really want to leave? That is when everybody was calling for the international community to intervene, to stop the bloodshed. It is a situation similar in other ways. This is sectarian bloodshed that is being heralded through free elections. The war in Yugoslavia started after a set of free elections and referenda that brought nationalists to power. We are facing very similar dilemmas. One way to approach this is not to remove the political echelons 3344561003 Page Type [E] 27-06-06 00:35:08 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG2 Ev 78 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence 29 March 2006 Mr Yahia Said and Mr Zaki Chehab that have been legitimately elected and brought to power but to punish those who clearly violate the rules of the game. The Minister of the Interior has been accused in successive UN reports and state department reports of running a terror campaign. Why are the multinational forces, who are in charge of security and ultimately responsible for security in Iraq, not taking action against that man? Q285 Mr Heathcoat-Amory: Is a secular democracy as we understand it possible in Iraq? The civic institutions are very weak. Democracy is seen by some as a western import anyway. We are spending all this eVort in building up political parties, a Parliament, ministries, a government. Is there not another perhaps less ambitious way to try and recognise the religious situation there, to try and achieve some reconciliation so we will not leave behind a functional parliamentary democracy but maybe something else? In other words, are we not misconceived in the ambition that we have for the country which is unrealisable? Mr Said: The format of democracy is not the matter here. To follow your line of argument, maybe the rush to have elections, constitutions and referenda was a mistake in an atmosphere of insecurity, foreign occupation, tension and terrorism. However, ultimately what democracy is about is human rights and the international community cannot leave a country, regardless of the regime that ends up in power, where there are pervasive human rights violations, whether it is a religious democracy or a sectarian country. While the final format of the political regime in Iraq may defer from a parliamentary secular democracy, at the end it will have to be a format that respects human rights. That is the ultimate goal. Iraqis have shown by their enthusiastic support for the elections and the constitutional process that they are prepared for even more than that, for a more formal democratic regime. It is just a question of how you create the environment for that process. One of the main problems with the intervention in Iraq was an attempt to micro-manage the process, to determine the outcomes, the very structure, everything from A to Z of the process. What the international community should have focused on is creating the conditions and the environment of security, most importantly, within which Iraqis can live. Q286 Chairman: US$32 billion has been pledged since 2003. Most of it is American money but there has been a huge expenditure, much of it on construction, water supplies and trying to deal with the infrastructure which was neglected for over 35 years, particularly in the south of the country. In the current situation, is that all irrelevant? Do the Iraqi people recognise that? Do they appreciate that? Is there any purpose in pushing more money into a dysfunctional society or should the international community be doing something else? Mr Said: There were several problems with the drive to invest massively in Iraq from day one. First of all, a lot of the projects that were designed and had money spent on them were long term projects which should have been left to the Iraqis to decide about. There have been some silly decisions made about things. For example, much of the power generating capacity was designed to work on natural gas which is environmentally correct, but it is a fuel that is not available in Iraq. Some of the new power stations now rely on imported fuel. These are the nicest power stations you can have and probably in the future Iraq would have benefited from them but they are not providing immediate relief. Generally, most of the large, big ticket projects did not produce immediate relief to Iraqis. However, one cannot ignore this picture. A lot of the aid should be targeted at policy and at helping Iraqis develop policies for the development of their economy, for dealing with immediate needs, rather than investing in large, big ticket projects. After all, Iraq has a lot of its own resources. The Central Bank of Iraq has $10 billion in its coVers. Iraq is not necessarily a capital deficient country. What Iraq needs is a smarter investment and development policy. Again, it brings us back to the political process. It requires a political process that will manage the country’s resources in a more eYcient, equitable, transparent way. Q287 Richard Younger-Ross: What do you see as being the main constraints on progress in reconstruction? How much of it is incompetence in Iraqi structures? How much of it is misguided policy by the coalition? How much of it is just straight corruption? Mr Said: It is all the above. The problem in Iraq is you need to start with the politics. Development is all about politics. In Britain when you build a road or divert a road or a bypass, it takes a very lengthy consultation process. It takes a long, extensive feasibility study and analysis before a decision like that can be taken. In Iraq, decisions about major construction and development have been taken on the back of an envelope by army engineers. A lot of these projects were misguided and ended up in wastage. The amount of cash that was pumped into the Iraqi economy after the drought of the sanctions was immense. Tens of billions of dollars poured onto Iraqi streets immediately after the invasion. Of course, that is a great motivation for corruption. It creates great incentives and conditions for corruption and it has contributed to the exacerbation of conditions of corruption. Again, the solution here lies at the political and policy level. You need robust Iraqi institutions to design and decide what projects to follow. If Iraq is short of capital for those, then you can bring in aid money. Q288 Richard Younger-Ross: Do you believe there is much corruption within the present political parties? Mr Said: The present political parties are very corrupt. They were very corrupt from day one. For example, thousands of Iraqis have been reinstated in their jobs after they lost them under Saddam’s regime for political reasons. In Iraq now with the paralysis of the economy, government employment is the main source of income for the majority of Iraqi families. Everybody in Iraq knew that they needed to 3344561003 Page Type [O] 27-06-06 00:35:08 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG2 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Ev 79 29 March 2006 Mr Yahia Said and Mr Zaki Chehab go to one of the political parties and get a paper saying they were a prosecuted member of that party, to get reinstated at the Ministry of Health or Education and so on. I had a driver in Baghdad who had three papers from three parties to support his claim to go back to teach at secondary school. Mr Purchase: We have that. We call them Liberal Democrats. Chairman: We are very grateful. We have covered a lot of ground. Thank you for coming along and giving us a perspective we do not always get from other people and for being so realistic, honest and frank in your answers. 3344561004 Page Type [SE] 27-06-06 02:13:13 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG3 Ev 80 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Wednesday 19 April 2006 Members present: Mr Mike Gapes, in the Chair Mr Fabian Hamilton Mr David Heathcoat-Amory Mr John Horam Mr Eric Illsley Mr Paul Keetch Andrew Mackinlay Mr John Maples Sandra Osborne Mr Greg Pope Mr Ken Purchase Sir John Stanley Ms Gisela Stuart Richard Younger-Ross Witness: Professor Philippe Sands QC gave evidence. Q288 Chairman: Good afternoon everybody. Professor Sands, welcome. We have one hour so my colleagues will have to be very disciplined this afternoon. We will begin by referring to your important book, which you kindly sent to us. You have suggested in your book that the Bush Administration is trying to rewrite the rules of the international system in terms of dealing with the new threats and the current situation. Do you think that the existing global rules do need to be changed or are they all entirely adequate for the current circumstances? Professor Sands: Firstly, thank you very much, Mr Chairman, through you to all the Members for inviting me and having an opportunity to address these important issues. The story that I have told in the book begins with a very strong American commitment to developing a system of global rules in the period during and immediately after the Second World War and which characterises the United States’ engagement with the international community for much of the next 40 years. The significant change that took place pre-dated the events of September 11 and the Administration of President Bush came into oYce with a commitment to rewrite already some of the emerging global rules—one thinks of the criminal court and of Kyoto. My thesis is that 9/11 presented an opportunity to take forward that project and it did so in relation to essentially two sets of rules. Firstly, the rules governing the use of force, the jus ad bellum; and secondly, the rules governing methods and means of warfare, the jus in bello. In both cases, coming to your question, my own view is that present challenges certainly require governments to review the adequacy of existing rules, but on the basis of the information that I have available to me—that which is essentially in the public domain— I do not believe that the rules in their fundamental essence require significant change. Q289 Sir John Stanley: Professor Sands, on page 182 of your book you wrote, “Tony Blair had privately signalled his commitment to regime change very early on. On 18 March 2002 Sir David Manning, Blair’s Foreign Policy Adviser, had written to the Prime Minister confirming that he had told Condoleezza Rice that, ‘You would not budge in your support for regime change.’” Can you tell the Committee, in your view what was the point in time when Mr Blair had made an irrevocable commitment to Mr Bush that if Mr Bush went for regime change by military intervention the British Forces would be there with him? Professor Sands: Thank you for that question. Again, obviously I have not been privy to absolutely all the information so I can only talk about that which is in the public domain and that which I have otherwise had sight of. My personal view is that the Prime Minister took a decision very early on, in March/April 2002, to provide unambiguous support to President Bush and that President Bush had decided at that time to remove Saddam Hussein from oYce, irrespective of what did or did not emerge. In terms of proof—and as a lawyer, as an English barrister obviously one is very careful in answering your question—I would say that certainly by 31 January 2003 the Prime Minister had taken his personal decision to support President Bush’s decision to remove Saddam Hussein from oYce. I refer to that date because that is a date from a memorandum that I have referred to later in the book, at pages 272 and 273, relating to a private conversation between the President and the Prime Minister at the White House, accompanied by a small number of other individuals, at which President Bush unequivocally states that he has decided to use force, and the Prime Minister unequivocally states, “I am solidly with you.” And in my view everything that happened thereafter, including the UN process, the views of the weapons inspectors, did not really matter what it turned up because the decision had been taken and the start date for war had already been pencilled in. So certainly by that date there had been, in my view, on the Prime Minister’s part, an irrevocable decision. That does not of course mean that he would not have to come back and persuade Cabinet, persuade Parliament and perhaps persuade others, the Military, to support the use of force, but I think his decision had been taken and his eVorts on the basis of the material that I am aware of were in that direction and unequivocally so. Q290 Sir John Stanley: So you are saying to the Committee that in your view a significant period, several months before the Prime Minister had asked the House of Commons for consent to go to war, and 3344561004 Page Type [O] 27-06-06 02:13:13 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG3 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Ev 81 19 April 2006 Professor Philippe Sands QC indeed during the period when the Prime Minister was saying to the House of Commons that no decision had been taken, that privately he was committed to supporting President Bush militarily in bringing about regime change by military force in Iraq? Professor Sands: Yes and the material is unequivocal. The New York Times ran a story a month after the latest edition of the book came out; they obtained confirmation from two British senior sources that the material was authentic and neither Downing Street nor the White House has challenged the authenticity of that material. That material is unequivocal and I think it follows from that that it would be, shall we say, helpful to consider very carefully what the private personal decision had been and what the public statements were. There is, regrettably in my view, a very significant gap between what was being said publicly and what had been said privately. Q291 Mr Keetch: Professor, can I turn to another subject in which this Committee has been interested, and that is extraordinary rendition. As an eminent QC could you give us your opinion of the legality or otherwise of the practice that we generally accept as being called extraordinary rendition? Professor Sands: The term extraordinary rendition does not have a legal definition as a term of art; you will not find it in any treaties or any domestic or other legislation. What it is typically taken to refer to is the practice of identifying an individual who may be associated with terrorist or related activities, apprehending him and removing him from the jurisdiction in which he is apprehended and taking him to another jurisdiction where he can be subject to treatment and, in particular, forms of interrogation, which may not be permitted by the law of the apprehending state. Q292 Mr Keetch: Therefore you would say that that is an illegal act under international law? Professor Sands: I think there is no international lawyer of whom I am aware who would say that it is justifiable in any circumstances for a State to extrajudicially or extra-legally take someone oV the streets, remove them to another country and subject them to treatment, forms of interrogation which may amount to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or torture within the meaning of the 1984 Convention against Torture. Q293 Mr Keetch: When we have questioned the Foreign Secretary, and indeed when we have questioned Administration oYcials on the other side of the Atlantic, one of the arguments has been, “Look, if this is going on why is there not evidence, why has a person not come forward and said, ‘Look, this has happened to me’?” Have you actually identified anybody or a case or two or three, whatever, where you actually think that this practice has gone on? I am not talking about CIA jets flying in and out of airports but an actual clear example where you believe that extraordinary rendition, as defined by you, has actually occurred? Professor Sands: I am going to have to be very careful what I say—I can only speak from my personal knowledge and I do not have awareness of all of the facts, and I have been very careful in making public comments on this issue—to put a caveat that one has to look at the facts and the facts plainly, if they exist, have not yet emerged. I am aware of certain cases in which the allegations have been made. Probably the leading case is the example of an individual of Canadian nationality who was flying, it is alleged, via JF Kennedy Airport in New York, who was apprehended, it is said, with the support of the Canadian and US Police Authorities and transferred, it is said, to Syria where, it is said, he was subject to treatment that did not meet the requirements of the 1984 Torture Convention in the process of interrogation. That is the best-known example that I am aware of, but again of course the facts have not yet been established so one has to have a certain caveat. There are several other cases that I am aware of but none from my own personal knowledge. Q294 Mr Keetch: Finally, are there any of those cases that actually involve the British Government or the transition of an individual through a British airport or through a British jurisdiction, because again the Foreign Secretary has basically said to this Committee, “Look, it does not happen and if it did happen you would have heard about it somehow”? Professor Sands: It is a diYcult question because I think on many of the cases of which we are aware the full facts are not out. There are individuals who are not British nationals but who have right of residency in this country who are currently being detained at Guantanamo and it is said in relation to a couple of them that they were taken oV the streets of a third country and transported eventually to Guantanamo, and it is suggested that there was some involvement of British authorities in that process. But, again, this is allegation and I do not have hard evidence—these cases have not gone to court. Another example that one might refer to— and it has been written up in his book—is a former British detainee, Moazzam Begg, whose story is told in his own book and alleges that he was taken oV the streets of Pakistan, transported from Pakistan to Bhagram Airbase in Afghanistan and from there transported onwards to Guantanamo. In the course of the story which he tells—and, again, it has not been tested in a court of law so one has to have a certain degree of caution—it appears that British authorities were involved in identifying his presence in Pakistan and certainly, according to his account, in questioning him very shortly after he was apprehended. That would suggest, in answer to your question, there is material that is worth investigating thoroughly. I think the most important point to make in relation to extraordinary rendition is that under the 1984 Convention against Torture Inhuman and Degrading Treatment, all States’ parties, including this government, which takes its international responsibilities seriously, have a positive duty to investigate allegations of wrongdoing of this kind. To the best of my 3344561004 Page Type [E] 27-06-06 02:13:13 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG3 Ev 82 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence 19 April 2006 Professor Philippe Sands QC knowledge there has not yet been a full investigation of that kind and such an investigation is required where there is credible evidence. commitment to the rule of law was put as strongly as it should have been put. That for me, personally, is a matter of considerable regret. Q295 Mr Horam: Coming back to your main theme, your assertion that America has tried to change the system of global rules and that the UK has been part of that as well, what role, in your view, should the UK have played? What role would you like to have seen it play? Professor Sands: One big caveat that has to be put in, which I elaborated in the book but which has not been fully brought out in the media, is I think that the situation is changing, in this sense. I think that the United States in particular has recognised that playing fast and loose with the rules comes with a price, and I think in particular in the second Administration of President Bush there has been an eVort to, shall we say, re-engage with America’s traditional rule of law type of approach. That is evidenced, for example, I think, in the work of Secretary of State Rice, who I believe is working very hard to ensure that the rules on torture and other rules— Q297 Mr Horam: Winding forward from that, you have no doubt heard Mr Blair’s speeches in Australia and elsewhere about the use of preemptive force in the international global problems. How does that fit into what you are saying about how the UK should have behaved or might not behave in the future? Professor Sands: The Prime Minister has made a number of speeches. Q296 Mr Horam: Accepting your caveat my question is about the UK. Professor Sands: I am making the caveat because on the best possible case it could be said that the United Kingdom and the Prime Minister have contributed to that eVort to re-engage. Again, I am not privy to all of the material that goes on behind the scenes, but let me give two examples where I think the UK has not acted as it ought to have acted. Firstly, in relation to Guantanamo, whatever may have been said privately, publicly there has been no critique at the highest level of government of the conditions under which Guantanamo has been set up and operated. I believe that has sent a signal to those in the Administration of President Bush who feel it is justifiable to proceed in this way, and I have been told by senior oYcials in the Administration of President Bush that Britain’s silence on Guantanamo amounts, in eVect, to an acceptance that that particular policy matter is justifiable. I think if the British government at the highest levels—not some junior oYcial—the level of the Prime Minister and the Foreign Secretary had spoken out decisively in the spring of 2002 the story with Guantanamo may have been diVerent— it may not have been, but I think it may have been. The second example, of course, is in the road to war on Iraq. I am certainly satisfied that the Prime Minister believed a second resolution from the Security Council would have been justified but, again, it seems pretty clear to me on the material that I have seen that there was no full eVort at the end of the day to ensure that the United States’ actions and the British actions were made fully consistent with the rule of law, and I regret on the basis of the material—some of which is described in the book—I do not have the sense that behind the scenes the interests of the United Kingdom in maintaining the rule of law and the United States’ Q298 Mr Horam: The theme was the use of preemptive military force, the justification for using pre-emptive military force, which changes the postwar global rules. Professor Sands: The Prime Minister has made a number of speeches which are not necessarily all in exactly the same direction. In some he has apparently been more supportive of pre-emptive force, in others he appears less supportive of preemptive force. I take it your question is concerned with those where he is more supportive of preemptive force consistently with the position adopted by the United States. For me that is a matter of considerable concern. On this particular aspect I share entirely the evidence that was put before this Committee by the Attorney General which indicated, I think very accurately, the circumstances in which the international rules governing the use of force can permit the use of force in self-defence where a State is subject itself to an attack or an armed attack is threatened. My own view is that the existing rules of international law justifying the use of force where an attack is threatened are suYcient to allow a State, including the United Kingdom, to act where there is credible evidence that a weapon of mass destruction is being assembled with the intent of using it in relation to, in this case, the United Kingdom. The concern that I have with the Prime Minister’s statements is that they tend to suggest that the existing rules are inadequate and I believe that the existing rules are adequate at present to deal with all foreseeable situations, and I believe the Attorney General gave the same evidence to this Committee some time ago. Chairman: I am conscious it has been indicated that we may have a vote imminently. If so we will break for 15 minutes and then come back and continue, but we will carry on until that moment. Q299 Mr Purchase: You have, as the Chairman said earlier, made it very, very clear that you believe that the Bush Administration used the war on terrorism as a way to obfuscate the purpose of changing the rules of the game. Given that that was nothing more than opportunism, we will say, do you think there is a grand plan in which the Americans see themselves as significantly changing the rules, in order to create some advantage, of 3344561004 Page Type [O] 27-06-06 02:13:13 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG3 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Ev 83 19 April 2006 Professor Philippe Sands QC which I know not? But if you have in your mind a way in which the rules could be changed to advantage the USA, whom would it disadvantage? Professor Sands: I think the first thing I would want to say is that I have been very careful not to talk about the USA because like any country there are lots of diVerent views, and to the extent I have a critique, which I do, it is of the Administration of President Bush. Q300 Mr Purchase: Fair enough. For USA substitute Bush. Professor Sands: I think there is a very significant internal battle going on even within the Bush Administration in terms of the nature and extent of its engagement with global rules. There are parts of the Bush Administration that remain very strongly committed to its traditional approach, recognising that a rules-based system has provided tremendous support and advantage to the United States over the last 50 years—in the economic field, in relation to intellectual property rights and also in relation to force. You see that, for example, in the statements of Senator McCain, a Republican senator, who has led the charge against the Administration’s eVorts to undo the rules. But there is also another camp that is apparently led by the Vice President and by the Secretary of Defence and formerly also by Mr Wolfowitz, who believe that the rules are a fundamental threat to the United States, that they restrain the United States. You can see that most clearly in a statement of 1997 during the Administration of President Clinton by the very individuals who now occupy these high oYces, in a document called The Project for a New American Century. The Project for a New American Century has a statement of principles which basically says that international law is part of the problem, we need to get rid of it, we need to remove these constraints from ourselves, and unconstrained by rules of better international law we would better be able to protect our national security. I think left to their own devices these gentlemen would get rid of the rules altogether on the belief—mistaken in my view, mistaken in the view of Senator McCain, mistaken in the view, I think, also of Secretary Rice—that the US is somehow threatened by the global rules. Q301 Mr Purchase: So the other side of that coin? Who gets disadvantaged? Professor Sands: The other side of the coin is the thesis I hold to—and which I think most people would generally accept—that in a complex globalising world we have an interest in a rulesbased system setting forth minimum standards of behaviour. If you start unilaterally tinkering with the rules and getting rid of the ones that you do not like, others will do the same thing in relation to the rules that they do not like. The great issue that is coming up is China. China, until the 1990s, was not a party to many of the multilateral instruments that we are very familiar with—the human rights instruments, the World Trade Organisation, the intellectual property instruments—and the Clinton Administration and indeed the previous Bush Administration expended a great deal of political capital in trying to persuade the Chinese to ratify all of these treaties, and by the end of the 1990s the Chinese had ratified the human rights instruments, the WTO and various other instruments. At the very moment that they have ratified them all in comes a new American Administration to basically shred the rules that have been put in place. So coming to your question, I think the crucial issue within the United States that is being asked right now is to what extent are America’s principal emerging competitors, including the Chinese, better oV unconstrained by global rules or subject to global rules—I think that is where the debate is heading—and I think the emerging dominant group is beginning to recognise that the Administration and the United States is better oV with the Chinese, with the Indians and with other emergent economic powers constrained by global rules, than acting entirely unconstrained by a rules-based system. Q302 Mr Illsley: Following on with this theme of an assault on the international rules—and I think one of your conclusions is that the robustness of the international rules system, the international law as we have it, is such that it will withstand this assault and that eventually we will return to a situation of the pre-Iraq war whereby the international law regime will hold good. But looking at Guantanamo Bay where, for some three years now, you have a group of people who are not classed as combatants, so they are outside the Geneva Convention, they have no status within the United States Judiciary because they are outside of the American territories, and you have this group of prisoners who are simply prisoners with absolutely no status anywhere within the international regime, how confident are you that the regime will come back to normality, given that we are three years into this and there are people in America commenting that these guys could be in Guantanamo Bay for the rest of their lives? Chairman: You have a quarter of an hour to think about the answer! We will come back in 15 minutes and continue. The Committee suspended from 2.59 pm to 3.13 p.m. for a division in the House Q303 Chairman: Professor Sands, if you would answer Mr Illsley’s question, thank you. Professor Sands: I do not want to be unduly optimistic nor do I want to be unduly starry-eyed about the state of international law or its prospects for resolving all the ills of the world, but there are strong signs that the all-out assault has failed. Whether you look at Senator McCain’s eVorts successfully to get the US to reengage with its obligations under the Torture Convention or whether you look at the rules governing the use of force, which were decided by the leaders of the world at the UN Summit in September 2005 as adequate to meet all of the changes that we 3344561004 Page Type [E] 27-06-06 02:13:13 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG3 Ev 84 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence 19 April 2006 Professor Philippe Sands QC presently face, including the United States, including—and it must have been rather painful for him to sign oV on it—John Bolton signing the Millennium Outcomes document, I think what has concentrated minds is the recognition that if you abandon the rules you pay a significant price. The situation that we now face in Iraq is plainly worse than it would be if the rules had been followed and the present events in relation to Iran, which are beginning to concentrate the mind on the adequacy of the rules and the circumstances, if any, in which force can be used has, I think, brought even the Bush Administration back to a re-engagement with multilateralism, and even in the last 48 hours President Bush has said without excluding any other options we will go down the multilateral route of diplomacy, if we can, to sort out the Iran situation. The diYculty, of course, is that we heard precisely the same thing in relation to Iraq and we now know that whilst public words were being given on the diplomatic and multilateral route, privately other actions had already been decided upon. So there is a certain scepticism, but subject to that I think that there is a broad recognition that the rules generally serve a useful purpose and you pay a price if you abandon them. Q304 Mr Illsley: I came back from America yesterday and running over the weekend were comments by Senator Lugar, Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, who had called upon President Bush to negotiate directly with Iran, which might have prompted his comments on multilateral diplomacy. The Committee met with Lugar during its last visit to the USA and with Senator McCain and one of the things Senator McCain said to us was there has to be a process for Guantanamo, and he was taking the argument that whether it was the Geneva Convention or whether it is a new process there has to be a process to address this issue. Yet we are not seeing any progress in relation to that. I was wondering, given that in America now there are articles appearing and generals are being interviewed on TV setting out how many troops it would need to invade Iran and what the strategy would be for military strikes. So this is gathering momentum—and I hope this does not happen— and it looks as though in the future this type of ad hoc attack on other countries for regime change or whatever is likely to be the norm, rather than how we would expect a properly conducted war with declarations and so on, against a war against terrorism, and it is likely that this informal assault on the rules is going to continue for years to come. I take a pessimistic outlook towards it and I cannot see any end to it. Professor Sands: I am afraid I disagree very strongly with that view. If you look at the situation in Iran, what is going on in Iran, the allegation is that it is engaged in the production of nuclear material for the purposes of producing an atomic bomb. If that is the case—and facts obviously are central—it would be in violation of its obligations under the 1968 Treaty on Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons. Imagine the scenario now in Tehran when Jack Straw or Condoleezza Rice or Tony Blair or George Bush tell the Iranians that they are not complying with their obligations under international law. The Iranians turn around and they say, “You have not been complying with your obligations in relation to Abu Ghraib, in relation to Guantanamo, in relation to the use of force in Iraq.” What has happened is that the credibility of Britain and the United States has been significantly undermined and that is broadly recognised in both countries. There is, therefore, in both countries an eVort—the right eVort, I think—to re-engage. If you are going to have a go at other countries for breaking the rules you need yourself to be in a situation in which you can credibly say you are meting your international obligations. Regrettably that is not the situation and I fear that it will not be the situation until we have a change of government in both this country and in the United States because the credibility of both heads of governments has gone, because of what happened in the road to war in Iraq. In the meantime the central and crucial thing to do is to re-engage public trust and I think that is what Senator Lugar and Senator McCain are trying to do, and I think they are doing it pretty successfully and they are doing it oV the back, also, of an eVort by others who have been very senior in the Bush Administration, who have publicly stated that they consider, for example, that Vice President Cheney has violated the rules of international law such as he himself may be a war criminal. The highest authority to have done that is Lawrence Wilkerson, who was Chief of StaV of Colin Powell throughout the entirety of the first Bush Administration, and that leads me to the answer to your question, which is that the United States is a complex country in which political processes take time, but there has been a backlash against what has happened and there is now, I think, a concerted eVort to reengage with its classical traditional position and marginalize those who say you can consign people to a legal black hole, you can use force against recalcitrant States and you can do X, Y and Z. So my reading is that the situation is changing, but I think it is absolutely right to be cautious about the state in which we find ourselves. Q305 Mr Pope: What happens when the international rules shortchange us? Intervention in Kosovo in the late 90s was probably illegal under international law but was certainly defensible morally, I would posit to you. So what happens when the rules are not good enough; the rules that were drawn up a long time ago are not fit for purpose in a modern world against failed States, rogue States. What is your view of that? Professor Sands: Assuming the assumption that underlies that question is right then obviously States and governments have a duty to reassess the adequacy of the rules. In the case of Kosovo it is probably right that the majority of international lawyers would have said that that use of force was contrary to international law. My own view is that 3344561004 Page Type [O] 27-06-06 02:13:13 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG3 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Ev 85 19 April 2006 Professor Philippe Sands QC there was a decent argument to be made in circumstances where mass atrocity is happening or is likely to be about to happen that States cannot sit idly by and do nothing when the Security Council fails to act. Interestingly, in the context of Kosovo after that conflict the Security Council did act and did adopt a resolution which, in the eyes of some, myself included, amounted to an ex post facto justification of the use of force. Of course that has not happened in the context of Iraq, but again very sadly because of the circumstances in which the war in Iraq was arrived at, the emergent justification that States could use force to protect fundamental human rights in third countries where the Security Council does not react has been stopped in its tracks, and it is understandable why it has been stopped in its tracks because other countries around the world are highly sceptical, to speak frankly, of claims by large or middle-sized western powers that they are going to use human rights justifications to use force. So another price we have paid for Iraq, regrettably, is that it has made it much more diYcult to justify the use of force in relation to Darfur or in relation to other places where a response is needed. should not act unilaterally.” That is the same answer that I have just given you and I think it is the right answer. Q306 Mr Pope: So if Tony Blair had been successful in getting a second resolution in the spring of 2003 it would have been legal? Professor Sands: Yes. Q309 Sandra Osborne: In relation to having a rulesbased international law, that can only surely work if it is seen to be fit for purpose and reform of the United Nations is at best faltering, partly due to the influence of the United States. So what is your take on the capacity of the United Nations to deliver in the modern setting? Professor Sands: The United Nations was designed for a world as it was constructed in 1945, and I think as some of the questions of your colleagues have made clear the world has changed very significantly since 1945. There are far more States— there were only 51 States originally in 1945 and there are now about 200. There are malign nonState actors who are committed to doing very nasty things to lots of people around the world and the structure of international legal order was not really designed to deal with those types of entities. Over six decades the United Nations has evolved and last year the high level panel convened by the Secretary General of the United Nations, with the support of all the permanent members of the United Nations, produced a high level report which identified areas for political change in the structuring of the United Nations. Governments deliberated for about a year on that high level report and governments agreed on some of the changes that needed to take place, but they were not able to reach agreement on all of the changes and I think it would be wrong to identify any single permanent member or any single country as having been particularly problematic in those changes—the United States is a sovereign state, it is entitled to have its views and put them through the negotiating process; the Russians have their views, the Chinese have their views, Britain had its views, France had its views—but ultimately the changes which were adopted were regrettably very limited and I think insuYcient to apply the changes that the Secretary General’s high level Q307 Mr Pope: Are you saying that the determination of legality is whether or not we can persuade the French? Professor Sands: The determination of legality is simply whether or not we follow the rules. There are five permanent members of the Security Council; they are each entitled to exercise a veto and each has on diVerent occasions, and it is part of the rules of the game that if one of the permanent members exercises a veto that is, according to the rules, the end of the matter. I happen to have spent some time reading very carefully the statement that President Chirac made, which was used to justify the claim that France would have vetoed a second resolution under any circumstances. He did not say that; he was very, very careful what he said. He dealt with the situation as it was in March 2003, namely on the basis of the facts then available there was no justification to authorise the use of force because there was no compelling evidence that Iraq was in further material breach. I have included further material in the book and from my perspective it would be entirely appropriate for this Committee to seek through its own methods to obtain some of that material because if I have seen it then certainly this Committee also ought to see it. But that material includes communications between the Foreign Secretary and the Prime Minister in which the Foreign Secretary recounts to the Prime Minister a telephone conversation with Colin Powell in which Colin Powell, coming to your question, says, “If there is insuYcient evidence to get a second resolution then the US Q308 Mr Pope: We can debate whether or not President Chirac said “never”, which I think he did. Are you suggesting to the Committee that this, de facto, makes the Prime Minister a war criminal? Professor Sands: I think the war was illegal. I think the material that has been put into the public domain, in my book and in an article in The New York Times, makes it clear that the decision to go to war was taken before the United Nations’ process was over. In those circumstances the Deputy Legal Adviser at the Foreign OYce, Elizabeth Wilmshurst, resigned, and in her resignation letter—which you will also find in the book—she makes it clear that the reason she felt compelled to resign was she could not contribute to the work of a government which was engaged on waging an illegal war that constituted the crime of aggression. In those circumstances it does indeed appear strongly arguable that those who prosecute an illegal war could be subject to investigation for the crime of aggression. 3344561004 Page Type [E] 27-06-06 02:13:13 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG3 Ev 86 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence 19 April 2006 Professor Philippe Sands QC panel required, particularly, for example, in relation to the question of a state’s responsibility to protect. What do you do when a massive and fundamental violation of human rights is taking place in another country, do you stand by and do nothing at all? The high level panel came up with reasonably specific rules to try to move the UN rules along a little bit and State said, “No, we are not having that, we are basically satisfied with the rules as they are.” So at the end of the day it is very easy, I think, to point the finger at the United Nations, but State members of the United Nations have the responsibility for making the changes and in their wisdom they have decided that they are going to stick more or less with the United Nations that they have, subject to a few changes, some of which are rather cosmetic. Q310 Sandra Osborne: We heard the view in the United States that because of that the UN in some ways could not be relied upon to take decisive action when that was necessary and that that situation could not continue. What would be your view on that? Professor Sands: I would agree with that view in the circumstances which are described in your question. The crucial issue is: who decides whether the rules are inadequate? That in essence was the problem with Iraq and the diVerence between Iraq and Kosovo. In Kosovo you had, broadly speaking, a decent coalition recognising that action was needed; in Iraq that did not exist and that delegitimised what happened in Iraq. But coming back to the fundamental question: are the rules adequate to deal with the threats that we now face? My view is that they are adequate, that if the State finds itself in a situation in which a malign organisation, al Qaeda or some other entity, is assembling weapons of mass destruction, it does not have to wait until the Security Council has authorised the use of force; if it is threatened by the actual use of force it is entitled to use force in selfdefence. So those rules remain adequate to deal with a changed situation. So it is the positive side of the rather amorphous nature of international law rules that they are suYciently ambiguous to evolve with time to take into account new situations. They are not set in stone. Q311 Sandra Osborne: If that view was really put to us in relation to Iran and the Security Council’s capacity to deal with that situation what would be your view of that, and could you see a situation where military action would be legal? Professor Sands: I think that is, with respect, a very important question. We are at the beginning of a process in which I think the first stage is to establish what the facts are. It appears, on the basis of what is already in the public domain, according to the International Atomic Energy Agency and Mr ElBaradei, that there is pretty strong evidence that Iran is engaged in an activity which is not consistent with its obligations under the Treaty on Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons. Assuming those facts are correct and assuming that Iran persists in its actions what is to happen? At the first stage we are in discussion right now of moving the debate to the Security Council and the Security Council has adopted a first declaration urging Iran to bring itself into compliance with its international obligations. You will note in particular that the Security Council was not able to reach agreement on a resolution—it is called a declaration—and part of the reason they could not reach agreement on a resolution which would have a binding eVect was the concern of what had happened with Iraq. If you adopt a resolution one or two countries may then unilaterally say, “That entitles us to act in that particular way,” and a number of countries were concerned that that should not happen again. Let us assume that after the declaration Iran does not bring itself into compliance what happens next? It goes back to the Security Council, the Security Council adopts, one assumes, a resolution, negotiations go on and ultimately a point may be reached in which there is a stalemate and in which the Security Council tells Iran what to do and Iran refuses. In those circumstances, which are some way down the line, the President of the United States has said that he does not exclude any options, including the use of force. I think it is premature to reach a firm view on what ought to happen in those circumstances but one can see two arguments. One argument is that when a State which is a party to the Treaty on Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons violates its obligations and is found to be in violation by the Security Council, States are entitled to use force in self defence. That might be one view that could be put by the Bush Administration, adopting a particular interpretation of pre-emption. Another view would be that in those circumstances it is only for the international organisations concerned to act and that anything that falls short of a threatened use of force against an individual State or a group of States will not justify the use of force until it has been authorised by the Security Council, perhaps in association with the International Atomic Energy Agency. Judging by the statements of the Foreign Secretary he is rather hoping that in the coming months things will become clearer as to which of those two views are likely to emerge and dominate. Q312 Richard Younger-Ross: I wonder if you could talk a little about what I call “legal creep”. You talked about the international laws being amorphous—moving—and you stated earlier that the US was trying to change international law and in some cases you have stated actually flagrantly breaching international law. How far do you think their actions have changed what is regarded as legitimate action? Professor Sands: I have talked a lot about the use of force; let me talk about another area of human rights. I wear two hats: I am an academic and I am a practising barrister and as a practising barrister most of my work involves acting for foreign States or European States so I get to work with a lot of governments. A number of governments in various parts of the world have said to me, at levels of 3344561004 Page Type [O] 27-06-06 02:13:13 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG3 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Ev 87 19 April 2006 Professor Philippe Sands QC Foreign Minister and President, “Since Britain and the United States now believe there is no problem of taking people oV the streets and banging them up indefinitely, in circumstances which previously they had said would violate international law, we do not see why we cannot do the same thing.” That it is the flipside of legal creep, if you like; it is that very regrettably two of the countries that have been most associated with a rules-based system have engaged in actions, one rather more directly than the other, which have tended to legitimise actions of other countries which are not consistent with international law obligations. So it has had that unfortunate eVect. To put it in hard terms: if the United States is able to say unilaterally there is a new category of persons who are not criminals and who are not combatants but who fall into a legal black hole such that they can be locked up indefinitely, then other countries are going to do the same thing when they find individuals who are engaged in terrorist acts or alleged terrorist acts, and so a precedent has been set, which I think is a very unfortunate precedent, and that is why my understanding is that within the Foreign OYce in particular there is a concerted eVort alongside various elements in the State Department in the United States to get Britain and the US batting back with the international rules because of the unfortunate precedent that has been set. Q313 Richard Younger-Ross: You have spoken about it will change when the Bush Administration goes, you have spoken that there is hope for change when Blair eventually stands down, as he has told us he would. What other measures do you think will have to happen for us to get back to the protection of basic civil rights where you can walk along the street and not just be arbitrarily arrested? Professor Sands: I think one of the elements that has characterised this country rather diVerently from the United States—and I spend amounts of time in both countries so I have seen it at first hand—is there has been a very vibrant debate in Britain over the right balance or balance to be struck between security and fundamental rights, and it is always a diYcult question and I think in Britain we can be pretty comfortable that the debate, including in this House, has ensured that a wide range of views have been put forward, and I think that is the heart in a democratic society of making sure that fundamental values, security and civil liberties are protected, and I think we have had that debate in Britain and we are continuing to have that debate in Britain. I have to say that it has not happened to the same extent in the United States and famously President Bush said, “If you are not with us you are against us,” and that has tended to stifle political debate and political opposition and political challenge to things like the Patriots Act, and I think that has left the United States in a rather unhappier place than is Britain today. But I think that is the starting point and I feel rather proud as I go around the world with people recognising the extent to which there has been a full debate with a wide range of views being expressed, and that is the starting point—that is the heart of it, I think. Q314 Richard Younger-Ross: And the closure of places like Guantanamo Bay, the release of prisoners in Afghanistan, would also have to occur before we could move on? Professor Sands: I think Guantanamo should be closed down tomorrow. Guantanamo is terribly undermining of a legitimate eVort to protect against a serious threat and it is being used mainly as an indication of the values that our societies purport to hold dear not being followed when their vital interests are at stake, and I think it has been terribly undermining in that sense. I recall here a statement made by the great American diplomat, George Kennan, who wrote a famous telex in 1947 from Moscow, where he was posted for the State Department, on the emergent Soviet threat, and he ended that telex by saying, “The greatest threat that can befall us as a nation is to become like those who seek to destroy us.” I think that is what we have to keep our eye on, and I think pretty much we have been able to keep our eye on that in this country. Q315 Mr Maples: I sense a dichotomy in your view about two separate kinds of intervention, but I wonder if you could perhaps clarify it for me. You seem to say that on Kosovo, which I think most international lawyers, certainly at the time, would have said was illegal—certainly in 1980 would have said was illegal—we did it not only without a UN resolution but knowingly could not get one, but you say international law moves and humanitarian intervention moves and you are perfectly happy that the humanitarian consequences of not taking action there justified taking action, but in the case of intervention to prevent or pre-empt an attack on yourself you say the existing rules of self defence are enough. But clearly if Iraq had been—which I think is a matter of dispute, although I do not personally think it was—sponsoring international terrorism, or if it had, as most people believed, been developing nuclear weapons, then the rules of self defence surely would have extended to the point of intervention. If we had known that it was developing nuclear weapons are we saying that the rules of self-defence have not extended that far? Perhaps there is not a diVerence in your opinion here and I am imagining it, but the UN Charter says somewhere that except for Article 51 you cannot intervene in the internal aVairs of another country, and you are saying that you can on humanitarian grounds but you cannot to prevent a nuclear attack on yourself. Professor Sands: I think that that is a very fair question. Can I just indicate my diVerent view? I do not believe that in relation to nuclear weapons as of March 2003 the people who were in the know believed that Saddam’s government was developing them, and I do not think that is in fact the case. But putting that on one side you have asked, I think, what is a very fair question and an important 3344561004 Page Type [E] 27-06-06 02:13:13 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG3 Ev 88 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence 19 April 2006 Professor Philippe Sands QC question. Classically there are two grounds to use force in international relations under international law: one, in self-defence, Articles 2(4) and 51 of the United Nations Charter; and, two, where authorised by the Security Council. In classic international law there is no third ground, but the United Nations Charter, when it was adopted in 1945, put into its preamble into Article 2 a commitment to protect fundamental human rights, which was in tension, if you like, with the fundamental sovereignty of each State—what happened if the State was violating its fundamental human rights of its nationals or of others internally? In those circumstances the classical rules of international law appeared to say that you could do nothing if the Security Council did not authorise you to act. Over a period of 50 years there have increasingly been calls by academics and by some States and by some governments to say that there is an emergent third circumstance in which the use of force would be justified. If a State is massively and systematically violating fundamental human rights, and if the Security Council has failed to act, then in those circumstances you cannot stand idly by and do nothing. I am supportive of that emergent third way, so to speak, in the development of international law rules but I recognise that States have not yet accepted unequivocally that there is such a right to use force, and crucially the issue, as with many of the issues, turns on the particular facts of the case in question, and in relation to the facts in question there is a second issue which is fundamental and that is credibility of motive. That, I think, is what links humanitarian intervention with self-defence. At the end of the day we are dependent on governments that regain the trust of their populations. If a Prime Minister or a President says, “This is the situation and this is why I have justified these actions” we want to believe that that is in fact the situation, and anything that undermines credibility and trust undermines the eVectiveness of the rules-based system. Both in relation to use of force by means of self-defence if a third entity is developing weapons of mass destruction or humanitarian intervention the concern is that those justifications will be used in circumstances where the facts do not authorise them for ulterior motives, and that is the diYculty that we have. Q316 Mr Maples: That is one of the dangers of developing it. But it seems to me—and I come back to my point—that you are saying that Kosovo was perfectly legal, there was a humanitarian disaster— although I think 30 people had been killed in Kosovo by Milosovich’s forces before we started bombing Serbia—but the possibility of a rogue State—and I think Iran probably falls into the category of rogue State by most of us by its issued threats to destroy another country, and most of us think it probably is developing nuclear weapons but we it will be very diYcult ever to prove it—but it is okay to intervene after 30 people have been killed by some rogue security forces by a very unpleasant government like Serbia’s, but it is not okay to intervene in Iran where we think maybe it is developing nuclear weapons which might kill millions of people. Similarly, I find it diYcult to believe that international law cannot move to cover the so-called illegal combatants that the United States has got, mostly at Guantanamo. These are people who are not prisoners of war in the sense that they would be covered by the Geneva Conventions. They were mostly captured on a battlefield in Afghanistan (some were not but most were) and the idea that we can put all those people on trial in the civil courts in the United States seems to me to be totally impractical. First, there could be thousands of people in such a circumstance and, anyway, if you have arrested them who has got the evidence? You are not there like a policeman collecting criminal evidence. Surely international law must be able to move on these two issues as well. I am not saying that if you are in Guantanamo you are not entitled to have your human rights defended but I cannot see that international law cannot move to cover people who are neither prisoners of war covered by the Geneva Conventions nor criminals or subject to criminal charges in the normal sense, but can move on humanitarian intervention. Professor Sands: If I can deal first with your second question, classically you bifurcate. You either go down the criminal law route, which is what Britain did in relation to the IRA, rightly in my view, and do not elevate criminals into warrior status, or you treat them as warriors. Either way there are rules which govern their treatment. I do not believe there is a third category. The individuals who have not been wearing uniforms or distinctive signs or recognising the rules of war in armed conflict do not fall into a middle category. They are combatants who are acting illegally and they can be held as security detainees in accordance with the Geneva Conventions. You do not need a Guantanamo type of place to put them in. The rules are perfectly adequate already to deal with that situation and the Red Cross, as the guardian of the treaties, has made that absolutely clear, so I do not accept that there is a need for some sort of third category. The existing categories are clear. I would add also that I think a great mistake was made by the Bush administration but not by the Blair administration in characterising the response to 9/11 as a “war on terror”. Having done that, they set aside the rules of criminal law but they also then recognised that the rules of armed conflict, humanitarian law, were inadequate and hence they had to create this third category and that is why they have got themselves into this diYcult mess. The British Government does not use the concept of “war on terror” and it is one which is I think best avoided for all the reasons that have now become clear. In relation to your first question, I do not know, Chairman, whether there is time to deal with it. Chairman: Probably not. I am conscious of time. I have three of my colleagues who have indicated that they want to ask questions. I also have another witness waiting outside. I am in your hands. If 3344561004 Page Type [O] 27-06-06 02:13:13 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG3 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Ev 89 19 April 2006 Professor Philippe Sands QC people feel that there is something they really want to ask and they are going to be brief and ask one question, then I will take it. Otherwise I am going to conclude things. Q317 Mr Hamilton: Chairman, there were a few things I wanted to ask but I will stick to one. Can I follow up something you said about Iran and its membership of the Non-Proliferation Treaty to which it is a signatory? What happens in international legal terms if Iran withdraws unilaterally from the Non-Proliferation Treaty? Are they then outside the rules and there is nothing the United Nations or international law can do about their development of nuclear weapons? Professor Sands: They are limited by the rules of international law, including the treaty itself, as to the circumstances in which they can withdraw. I have not, I am afraid, looked at the withdrawal clauses of the treaty so to be able to answer your question in full, but in simple terms they cannot simply announce that with eVect from tomorrow they are no longer parties to the Treaty on NonProliferation of Nuclear Weapons. More significantly, in the most recent review conference, the 1995 Review Conference on the Treaty on NonProliferation of Nuclear Weapons, they transformed their undertaking not to develop nuclear weapons from a 30-year commitment to an indefinite commitment and that would have implications for the circumstances in which they could withdraw. But plainly you are right in this sense: states as sovereign entities are free to ratify treaties and, in accordance with the relevant rules, to opt out of them. Depending on whether opt-out is permitted, it may be that it is possible for them to withdraw, as North Korea did, from the Treaty on Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons, and that, of course, would leave them in a circumstance in which they would not be open to the criticism that they are not complying with their international legal obligations and would transform, I think, the nature of the legal debate as to what can be done to respond to that situation. Q318 Andrew Mackinlay: I want to take you back to your view, the way I understand it, which is in a sense that not only the United States but also Prime Minister Blair had committed themselves to regime change come hell or high water, as it were. It is an area which troubles me personally and all the people who voted for this. In the period just before it became clear that there was not going to be a second UN resolution I (and probably others here) met the Prime Minister with two other Members of Parliament and I put to him the question that if there was compliance—and by “compliance” I meant full disclosure, access and destroying weapons of mass destruction if they were there— would an invasion be avoided. He replied to me —and I remember it well because he referred to the President in first name terms; he referred to him as “George”—that he put this to the President of the United States, that if there was full compliance by Saddam there would be no invasion, and he told me that the President of the United States confirmed that was so. Why I put that to you is because that particular period was an important part of my life, as with everybody else here; we shall think about it till the day we die—our decisions, our dispositions. The Prime Minister made it clear to me that if there was compliance by Saddam there would be no invasion. That was both his desire and the undertaking given to him by the President of the United States. I wanted to put that to you because I really want to find out what you think about that. Professor Sands: The only material that I can direct you to, and indeed I would invite the committee to obtain a copy of it in order that it can inform its own view, is the memorandum of 31 January 2003 describing the meeting between President Bush and Prime Minister Blair. The New York Times has described it as a five-page memorandum. The President says in express terms that irrespective of what the inspectors find the war will begin on 10 March 2003, irrespective of whether there is a second resolution, and the Prime Minister says, and I quote, that “he was solidly with the President and ready to do whatever it took to disarm Saddam”. On that basis it appears that the Prime Minister’s statement to you was inconsistent with what he told the President of the United States on 31 January 2003. Q319 Ms Stuart: Feel free to say, “I will drop you a note on that” because I genuinely want to take you back to your undergraduate days when you did Kelsen and Grundnorm, and what you said about this emerging third way for the application of the force. Can you think of another way, which will be a kind of accepted third application of the force other than an example where a country will go ahead and break the rules but is successful and then we come and accept it, in the current way the UN is structured such that we will get to a sensible set of rules which will define the right of intervention, and I use as an example Zimbabwe, and I am happy if you just drop us a note? Professor Sands: You have raised, obviously, a hugely important and significant question. I just come back to what I said before: the law is moving in a particular direction. The crucial issue is, what are the circumstances in which that is justified and, most centrally, how can we be satisfied that motives for action are genuinely what the proponents for action say they are, but I will certainly drop you a note.1 Chairman: Professor Sands, thank you very much for coming along. We have covered an enormous area in quite a short time and we are grateful to you. Ev 100 3344561004 Page Type [E] 27-06-06 02:13:13 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG3 Ev 90 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Witness: Sir Christopher Meyer KCMG, former British Ambassador to Washington, gave evidence. Q320 Chairman: Sir Christopher, thank you for coming this afternoon. I apologise first of all for keeping you waiting but we had a division which extended the period of the previous session and we also had to conclude all the questions we had. I also apologise in advance that I think we are about to have another vote which will potentially mean that we will have to break for 15 minutes and come back, but hopefully we can at least begin before that vote and then take it from there. We have a number of areas we would like to ask you about and I would like to begin by taking you to your assessment of your time in Washington, the relationship between the UK and the US and what influence we have as a country on the United States. Sir Christopher Meyer: Thank you, Chairman, for inviting me to this session this afternoon. It is a great pleasure to be here. I think that the United Kingdom can have and does have quite significant influence over the conduct of American foreign policy. If you look at the history, “special relationship” as a term came into being some time in the Second World War, and if you look at its “history” you will see many ups and downs from the British point of view. The ups tend to be at a time when we have been able to exercise really quite significant influence over the making of American foreign policy. If the issues are well chosen, if the case is made strongly, this can be done. The world’s only superpower can be significantly influenced by countries and governments that are physically, if you like, significantly inferior to the US. Q321 Chairman: Peter Riddell’s book is called Hug Them Close, and he talks about every Prime Minister except one, Edward Heath, having worked on a strategy of having as close a relationship with the US as possible and that every British Government since World War II had always operated on that basis with that one exception. Do you think the relationship is closer now than it has been in the past or would that be a fair assessment, that all governments except the one have had that close relationship? Sir Christopher Meyer: I think it has been a history since 1945, as I said, of quite considerable ups and downs. These have had almost nothing to do with whichever political party is in power in Washington or in London. They have had everything to do with personalities and the issues of the moment. For example, this may not be quite the answer to your question, but John Major had a very close relationship with George Bush senior and a rather distant relationship with Bill Clinton. Q322 Chairman: There were reasons for that, were there not? Sir Christopher Meyer: There always are reasons, Chairman. Q323 Chairman: It was the Intelligence Services checking files, if I remember correctly. Sir Christopher Meyer: Yes, but that actually was untrue. It was a bum rap, to be perfectly honest. I happened to be in Downing Street as Press Secretary at the time so I sort of knew what was going on, but it was believed on the other side of the Atlantic and that was all that mattered really. LBJ’s memoirs and the tape recordings of his conversations, which have been published as books, I think at one point show his antipathy not only to Harold Wilson but also to Harold Wilson’s pipe, which was ironic because I believe that Harold Wilson did not usually smoke a pipe and preferred a cigar, so there you go. It is much more uneven, I think, than the mythology (is that the right word?) of the relationship might have you believe. Q324 Mr Horam: One point you make in your book is that although we have a common language with the United States we should not imagine for one moment that it is a similar sort of country; in fact, it is remarkably diVerent, and you make a lot of the exceptionalism of the United States and its sense of destiny and of its own values. How far has that been apparent in its conduct of foreign policy under the Bush administration? Sir Christopher Meyer: I think it has been very apparent and it is one of the ways in which you can measure the diVerences between the two sides of the Atlantic. For example, if you look historically at American foreign policy you can very crudely speaking divide it into periods when the so-called idealists—Woodrow Wilson, for example—gained the ascendancy and when the realists, the pragmatists, gained the ascendancy, which was most of the time. When I say “idealists” I talk about either a foreign policy infused with a very high degree of moralism or a foreign policy infused with a very high degree of religiosity. The latter has, I think, been very much apparent during the two administrations of George W Bush. That is incredibly diVerent from the European tradition of foreign policy generally and the British tradition of foreign policy in particular. When people talk about the new Conservative influence on American foreign policy today or that of Christian evangelism/fundamentalism, it is another way of saying that under George W Bush, at least in his first administration—I would make a diVerence for the second administration—there has been a distilled form of the idealist tradition of American foreign policy which has been there since the foundation of the republic. It means that the centre of gravity in American foreign policy since the foundation of the republic has been far more towards idealism, messianism, religiosity, whatever phrase you like to choose to include in that. Q325 Mr Horam: Is intervention included in that? Sir Christopher Meyer: It can well be, yes. Monroe doctrine has got some relevance to this. It is very diVerent. It is not axiomatic, to put it mildly, therefore, that in viewing the world as a whole the 3344561004 Page Type [O] 27-06-06 02:13:13 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG3 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Ev 91 19 April 2006 Sir Christopher Meyer KCMG United Kingdom’s views and interests will automatically coincide with those of the United States. Sometimes they will; sometimes they will not. Q326 Mr Heathcoat-Amory: President Bush came into oYce with great doubts about nation building, but then, because of 9/11 and other events, he attacked Iraq because of a perceived threat. Added to that he now seems to be developing a doctrine of building democracy on the ground that democratic states are not a threat to their neighbours. What is this new Bush doctrine? What are the rules? What guide is it to future decisions about whether to intervene or not and on what grounds and where and when? Sir Christopher Meyer: I think it is a very rough and ready benchmark by which the detail of American foreign policy can be assessed and judged. From the very first time that I met George W Bush, and I am talking personally now about the President, which was back in 1998 when he was Governor of Texas, it was quite clear that as he was starting to think about what he would do in the world if he were to run for President. The notion of being a beacon, a progenitor of democracy around the world was already becoming very attractive to him and that developed when he became President. Although great play is made of this in the most recent National Security Strategy published a few weeks ago, I do not think there is novelty in it, and in a sense, where Afghanistan and Iraq were concerned, the democratic impulse for the President personally was almost as strong as his reaction to the horror of 9/11. In fact, the one thing, if you like, pumped up the other. Today, which is, if you like, the third phase of Bush foreign policy, the first being up to 9/11, the second being from 9/11 to roughly the end of the first administration, the third being approximately the second administration, looks to me like a foreign policy which is wrapped in the rhetoric of spreading democracy around the world where possible with the execution of this policy in the hands of Condoleeza Rice who is much more of a throwback to the realist/pragmatic tradition of US foreign policy. Q327 Mr Heathcoat-Amory: Do you think that American power is now in decline and do you think there is a risk that President Bush’s real legacy will be a reluctance on the part of a future American Government to do all this again? In other words, although we supported the Americans,—or I did; I supported the Americans to keep them engaged in the world—actually the failures in Iraq will have the opposite eVect and there could be a retreat into American isolationism, as, of course, has happened several times in the past? Sir Christopher Meyer: As far as Iraq is concerned the game has yet to be fully played out and it looks extremely depressing, it looks pretty negative, and it may well be that the whole enterprise will end severely in tears. That is what a betting man would say now. It is not necessarily what will have happened five years from now, so the game is not yet over and it may well be that the next American President, towards the end of his or her Presidency, may be able to say, looking back, “We went through a horrible period but in the end the thing worked out reasonably well”. I am not sure that I believe that is what will happen but it could happen. The lessons to be drawn from this episode by both the American people and the American political class are not yet fully formed. You say isolationism. I do not believe in any circumstances there will be a relapse, as you put it, into isolationism because the challenge in dealing with the United States is not the fear that it will become isolationist. It is the degree to which it will act unilaterally or not, unilaterally or with allies, be they formal or informal. The United States is too much involved in the world, in globalisation. In some ways it has created globalisation. Whether we are talking economically, technologically or culturally it is interwoven into the fabric of the world as a whole, so even if you get up in Congress and say, “Let us cut these links here and those links there”, it cannot work. It cannot work in a world where China holds the largest amount of American debt. It simply cannot work in a world where American foreign direct investment last time I looked was more focused in Europe than in any other area of the world. It is not possible any longer to be isolationist. I do not know exactly what military conclusion they may draw from the episode in Iraq and in Afghanistan but more generally there is no question of the United States being able to shut the frontiers, bring down the shutters and become autarchic once again, as I suppose they were in the 19th century. Q328 Sir John Stanley: Sir Christopher, Philippe Sands, who has just been giving evidence to us, on page 272 of his book says that on 31 January 2003 President Bush and Prime Minister Blair had a twohour meeting at the White House accompanied by six close aides and advisers. For the record could you tell us whether you were one of the aides and advisers present at that meeting? Sir Christopher Meyer: No, I was not. I was in an anteroom shooting the breeze with other members of the British and American delegations. Q329 Sir John Stanley: Thank you. He goes on to say that the note of the meeting in the form of a letter, and I quote, “confirms that the decision to go to war had already been taken by President Bush”. Could you tell the committee, from where you were as our Ambassador in Washington, at what point you believe Mr Blair made a firm commitment to be with Mr Bush should Mr Bush decide to invade Iraq? Sir Christopher Meyer: If I can just give a bit of context as I saw it for the meeting on 31 January 2003, I had said to London first that I thought the atmosphere had changed markedly towards war after the Iraqi declaration of 7 December in which they responded to the UN’s request to make a full declaration of their holdings of weapons of mass 3344561004 Page Type [E] 27-06-06 02:13:13 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG3 Ev 92 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence 19 April 2006 Sir Christopher Meyer KCMG destruction, because that declaration was considered to be, rightly or wrongly, so mendacious that the Iraqis had run out of rope, if you like. The next very important stage was two days before that meeting of 31 January. On 29 January the President gave his State of the Union speech and after that I remember thinking and so telling London that I thought that if the President had given himself any wiggle room for not going to war he had closed that oV in that speech. It was a very powerful, almost missionary statement about it being America’s destiny to deal with Saddam and it looked pretty clear that this was going to be war. By the time that Tony Blair came to the meeting on 31 January I was saying that, absent a coup in Iraq or Saddam suddenly deciding to go oV into exile in some hospitable place like Minsk, the die was cast for war and therefore the Prime Minister’s main objective for that meeting should be to ensure that in the coming war we went into battle, if you like, in the best company possible, which is another way of saying, “Let us get a second resolution”. Q330 Sir John Stanley: That does not answer my question. Could I put it to you again? At what point do you believe Mr Blair was firmly committed to going to war with President Bush? Sir Christopher Meyer: The way I would put it would be like this. I think Tony Blair had made a decision to support George Bush, however the cards fell, from the Crawford Summit of April 2002. This is a distinction I make in my book. This was not a decision in April 2002 at Crawford to go to war on such-and-such a date. It was not an operational decision, but Blair had decided that the right thing to do, given his own view of Saddam Hussein, was to be with the President of the United States whatever decision he chose to take. That was a decision by Blair, I think, taken to try to ensure that he had the maximum influence possible over the President. This is a very important distinction because the criticism has been levelled at both President Bush and Prime Minister Blair that from a very early stage in 2002 they had decided, come what may, that they were going to go to war against Saddam Hussein in the spring of 2003. I do not think that is true because the consequence of that is that everything that then followed in 2002, including the eVorts of the United Nations, would have been simply a smokescreen for a devious plan, if you like. I do not believe that to be true. I do not believe the two leaders lied to their respective public opinions. I do believe though that they were very doubtful that Saddam would ever do the right thing and that probably it would come to war, but we did not get to the moment of truth until early 2003. Q331 Sir John Stanley: But you are saying to the committee that, from the Crawford Summit onwards, if President Bush had decided subsequently to go to war he had been assured by Mr Blair that the British would be with him? Sir Christopher Meyer: I cannot say to you, Sir John, that those were the words used because, as you will probably be aware, at Crawford the Prime Minister and the President were locked together, without any advisers being there, for quite a considerable period of time, and to the best of my recollection advisers were there only for a discussion of the Middle East because running in parallel to all this was an intifada that seemed to be running out of control, so I do not know exactly what transpired between President and Prime Minister, but the speech that the Prime Minister made the next day at College Station, which was one of the best speeches he made on Iraq, sounded to me like a statement of very strong support for the President, whatever he chose to do. Do not forget that, going back to 1998, Blair had been making speeches long before George W Bush came on the scene, recognising the threat that Saddam presented to the world at large and saying, “We have to deal with this man one way or another”, so Blair was always a true believer in dealing with Saddam “one way or another” long before George W became President of the United States. Q332 Mr Keetch: Just to continue this if we can, Sir Christopher, you said that you did not believe that the events of late 2002 in the UN were a smokescreen, but, again going back to the memo that we have been told about on 31 January, it is also alleged in that memo that President Bush actually set the date for the war as being 10 March 2003. Therefore, if what had happened in 2002 was not a smokescreen, was the attempt to get a second resolution and to persuade President Chirac to agree to a second resolution a smokescreen, because if it was the case that the March date had been set for the conflict, going back to the UN in a sense was a pointless exercise? Sir Christopher Meyer: You cannot quite put it like that. Q333 Mr Keetch: How can you put it? Sir Christopher Meyer: The thing is, when you are looking back with the benefit of hindsight it does look like a straight linear progression which ends up with war beginning on 20 March. It was not like that; at least, it did not seem like that to me. Maybe I was too close to the action. There seemed to be a lot of zigging and zagging, so from the period, say, some time in October 2002 onwards until the time I left Washington I heard all kinds of dates for contingency planning. For a long time people were saying to us, “It is going to be”—I cannot remember the exact date—“January the somethingor-other 2003. That is the contingency date against which we are doing our planning.” That timing collapsed for a variety of reasons, including that they could not get the Turks to agree to let one of the American divisions transit Turkish territory. Then at the beginning of 2003 I remember one time hearing mid February, then late February, and I thought, “That is getting damn near my birthday”, and then March, and 10 March appears as a date in that record of the meeting on 31 January, and 3344561004 Page Type [O] 27-06-06 02:13:14 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG3 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Ev 93 19 April 2006 Sir Christopher Meyer KCMG then in the end it was 20 March. The issue is not the fact that dates specifically were being discussed that makes it seem that what followed was just a smokescreen. The question I think has to be a diVerent one. If, against all odds, a majority of the members of the Security Council were prepared to go for a second resolution, or a majority were prepared to countenance war, say, in April or something like that, it might have changed the game. In the event all the diplomatic eVorts to get members of the Security Council on board for a second resolution foundered, for well-known reasons, so that eventuality never happened. I do not think it is as clear-cut as you suggested in your question. Q334 Mr Keetch: Let me ask one other question. Again, Philippe Sands suggested to us earlier this afternoon that when the decision to go to war was taken during those early months of 2003 the Prime Minister and the President no longer believed that Saddam Hussein probably had a WMD programme and no longer believed that he was therefore a threat to us. Did you believe at that stage that he had a WMD programme and did you think that the Prime Minister believed that? Sir Christopher Meyer: Oh yes, I do believe that the Prime Minister thought he had a WMD programme. I believed that he had a WMD programme. I did so not on a hunch but on the basis of intelligence that I was seeing at the time. Of course, depending on whether we are talking about January or February 2003, Blix by that time had got cracking on his inspections and I think made two reports to the Security Council before war intervened. I do not think I am breaking some state secret in saying that in some of the locations where he looked for WMD he was directed there by intelligence fed to him either by the Americans or by us, and so this was being done not on the basis, “By God, the stuV is not there”, but, “We think it is there and we think it is there”, and then Blix did not find it. What we did not know at the time was whether this because Blix was using the intelligence slowly or poorly or not or whether it was because the Iraqis had been tipped oV and were moving the stuV to another location. None of that was clear, so if that is what Philippe Sands said to you beforehand I do not think I would agree with that. I think there was a strong belief at the time that there were weapons of mass destruction somewhere and it was not until the Iraq Survey Group came back with its report in September 2004 that you had a pretty definitive statement that if there had been stuV around it was probably buried in the sand somewhere, or might be in Syria, or even, conceivably, in Iran. Q335 Chairman: Perhaps I can say for the record that in my understanding of what Philippe Sands said he was referring to nuclear weapons. I do not think he referred to WMD, and your question referred to WMD. Sir Christopher Meyer: There is a big diVerence. Chairman: I think we ought to get that clear. He did not deal with chemical weapons. Q336 Mr Heathcoat-Amory: He was talking about nuclear weapons. Sir Christopher Meyer: Can I make a very brief postscript? On nukes, if I remember well, we were not at all sure if there was any evidence around of something actual in the pipeline, as it were, as is happening in Iran, but it was biological and chemical weapons which were the focus of attention. Q337 Mr Pope: I want to be clear about this point because you obviously had privileged access to the Prime Minister in the spring of 2003, you had privileged access to intelligence data. Do you think the Prime Minister deliberately misled the House in his speech on 18 March? Sir Christopher Meyer: Absolutely not. Q338 Mr Pope: It is very helpful to have that on the record. I want to follow on from something that Sir John said, and this was about British influence in the run-up to the war. You suggested that Tony Blair eVectively said to President Bush at Crawford, “We will be with you, come what may”. “However the cards fall” was how you characterised it. Do you think we made the most of our influence and leverage from April 2002 onwards? Do you think that it was a result of British influence that America sought a second resolution? Sir Christopher Meyer: To answer your second question first, the Americans were being pressed not only by us but also by Aznar, the Spanish Prime Minister, the Australian Prime Minister, Howard, and I think even by Berlusconi. All of them said, “We need a second resolution”, so there was stuV coming in from all sides and these were the essential allies for Bush when it was a question of going to war. The Americans were never keen on a second resolution, for well-known reasons, but I think they made a judgment that because their essential allies for the operation wanted one then they would make the eVort and, although it was not clear at the press conference on 31 January 2003 that Bush was at all keen on pursuing it, actually the Americans did put their shoulder to the wheel afterwards, and the irony of it all was that, having finally put their shoulder to their wheel, they got absolutely nowhere with anybody, even in their own back yard in South America with the Chileans and the Mexicans. I cannot remember what your first question was. Q339 Mr Pope: Do you think war would have been sooner if it had not been for Blair and the other allies, such as Aznar and Howard? Sir Christopher Meyer: I do not think it would have been sooner. When the notion of January was floating around in Washington, which was for most of the autumn of 2002, I remember talking to somebody, whom I really do not want to name, 3344561004 Page Type [E] 27-06-06 02:13:14 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG3 Ev 94 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence 19 April 2006 Sir Christopher Meyer KCMG who was fairly senior in the White House, and I think I had this conversation in October 2002, about this January timing, and the answer I got was, “It is going to slip”, and the reason given then was Turkey. I think it is no secret that when the Prime Minister came to Washington in January 2003 one of the things that he was keen to have was a delay in the start to the war. At the time there was a February date floating around in the air. In the end the February date slipped, not because of Blair’s advocacy or anybody else’s, but because the American forces simply were not ready, and I think 20 March became the date because we had not got anywhere with the second resolution and the guys were ready to go. The Committee suspended from 4.25 pm to 4.39 pm for a division in the House Q340 Richard Younger-Ross: During your discussions in the time you were in Washington can you give us any light on what discussions you were aware of or what preparation was being made or what joint meetings were being set up on what to do in Iraq post-conflict? Sir Christopher Meyer: Yes. My recollection of that is that not a lot was going on to discuss Iraq postconflict. It was clear from Crawford, roughly around that time onwards, that the Americans were not devoting a great deal of attention to what would follow. Towards the end of 2002 I remember two Foreign OYce (or they may have been interdepartmental) delegations from Whitehall coming over to talk about what was going to happen if and when there was war and Saddam was removed. The diYculty they had, and I cannot give you exact dates because I cannot remember; it was something like November/December, or it might even have been October, was that there was not a united position on the American side in the bureaucracy on post-war, and so they found themselves talking separately to the State Department and then to the Ministry of Defence. By the time I retired from Washington and from the Service it did not seem to me that that kind of discussion had got very far. Q341 Richard Younger-Ross: Are you aware that there was a meeting which the Americans organised in a hotel in Cobham of Iraqi dissidents? Sir Christopher Meyer: What I was aware of, and this is a slightly diVerent thing, is this. Post-Iraq: what actually are we talking about here? If we are talking about an agreed plan on what to do on Saddam-toppled-day plus one, plus two, plus three, that did not seem to have been worked out between the British and the Americans. On the question of the Iraqi opposition, during most of 2002 I was aware of a conflict within the US administration over whether Challabi and the INC were worth supporting or not. There was talk all the way through the early summer of 2002 of getting together a conference of Iraqi dissident groups, which would include the INC but not only the INC, and this seemed to have broken down on rivalries between the INC and the other groups whose names I cannot remember, and on at that time a very intense, almost internecine warfare between the Department of Defence and the State Department. I do not remember a meeting in Cobham but it sounds to me like some kind of oVshoot of those rather abortive discussions that were going on inside the administration. Q342 Richard Younger-Ross: It was broadcast as a secret location and a secret meeting but from the exterior shot of the hotel it was quite clear where it was to anyone who has ever driven down the A3. If I can go on from that, Challabi was seen as promoted by a number of those within the US. Did we have a view on his worth? Were we keyed into the information he was giving, both in terms of what should happen post-conflict, but also the information it is alleged he gave regarding weapons of mass destruction? Sir Christopher Meyer: I was told by the Foreign OYce that they did not hold the INC in high regard. They held Challabi and the INC in low regard, much like the State Department did and, as far as I remember, much as the CIA did. I have to say that this is why, and I think I have made this clear elsewhere, I did not fully take on board the influence of Challabi on the US administration other than the State Department until I had left Washington. I was aware he was around. I knew the INC were very active, but what I had not fully appreciated was for how long and how assiduously Challabi had cultivated the Republican Party in Washington. I believe that he modelled his campaign on that of the African National Congress which had a good deal of success in another decade in working on the US administration to come round and support them. It was only later when I was talking to people in Washington after I had left the Service that I came to understand how successful he had been at getting over to the Republican administration the notion that postSaddam was not going to be all that diYcult: you just turned up, you got rid of him, Iraq was ripe for revolution and upset, the British and American forces would be welcomed as heroes in the streets of Baghdad and Basra, and oV you would go. He and his party were very largely responsible for convincing the Americans that that was what would happen after Saddam fell, and, of course, it was not like that at all. Q343 Richard Younger-Ross: So indirectly you are saying that Challabi was responsible for the US and British failure to deal with the post-conflict period? Sir Christopher Meyer: Forgive me for saying so but I think it is a little bit simplistic to say that because there were plenty of other voices in Washington and London who were arguing the contrary. The powers that be, or the powers that were, in both Washington and London took the view that they took. There was a very strong feeling that it was not going to be particularly diYcult after Saddam fell. Philippe Sands may have 3344561004 Page Type [O] 27-06-06 02:13:14 Pag Table: COENEW PPSysB Unit: PAG3 Foreign Affairs Committee: Evidence Ev 95 19 April 2006 Sir Christopher Meyer KCMG mentioned this when he came in the earlier session but the minute of the meeting between George Bush and Tony Blair on 31 January 2003, which fell oV the back of somebody’s lorry into his hands and into his book, records the Prime Minister and the President